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The messiah part 4, Old testament's angel, Jesus-story

Who is the Angel of the LORD?


    By Jason Bradley | March 26, 2019, Article


     The Angel of the Lord is an enigmatic figure who appears in numerous passages throughout the Old Testament. This angel is often believed to be the second member of the Trinity-Jesus Christ Himself. In the Old Testament, the Bible often blurs the line between "The angel of the Lord" and God, sometimes the calling the angel God outright. At other times the angel of the Lord is clearly distinct from God.


1. He is identified as God.

2. He is distinct from God.

3. He fulfills many of the roles and ministries we recognize in Jesus.


       Let's take a closer look at this enigmatic figure. But first, let's respond to a couple of questions you might have.


  AREN'T ANGELS CREATED BEINGS?


       When we hear the word "angels," we tend to fall back on the image of winged beings. We're conditioned to think of angels as an order of beings created by God and in lots of instances, that's probably accurate. The biblical Seraphim (Isaiah 6) and Cherubim (Exodus 25:20) would fall in this category. But that's not the angelic standard. The Hebrew word translated as angel is "malakh," and it simply means "messenger." Sure, some angels are created beings with wings, but that's not the norm. More often than not, angels look just like you and me. When we think of them as messengers or envoys, we realize that almost anyone could technically be an angel.


  ISN'T THERE AN ANGEL OF THE LORD IN THE NEW TESTAMENT?


       God has plenty of messengers throughout scripture. Any one of them could be called an "angel of the Lord." Angels of the Lord appeared in the New Testament to Joseph (Matthew 1:20) and Peter (Acts 12:7). But that's not the same messenger we're talking about here. The messenger that plays tour guide to John in Revelation isn't the angel of the Lord from the Old Testament. As we'll see in a moment, the Old Testament's angel of the Lord accepted worship, but look at what the angel of the Lord says to John:


"I, John am the one who heard and saw these things.

And when I heard and saw, I fell down to worship at

the feet of the angel who showed me these things. But

he said to me, "Do not do that, I am a fellow servant of

yours and of your brethren the prophets and of those

who heed the words of this book. Worship God." (Revelation 22:8-9, NASB)


        Let's examine what's unique about the angel of the Lord. We'll do a quick overview of some of the biblical character's interactions with the angel and follow it up with a cheat-sheet recap of clues we pick up about the angel's identity from each exchange.


  HAGAR AND THE ANGEL OF THE LORD (Genesis 16:8-14)


    When God's promise of a child to the aging Abram and Sarai doesn't happen as quickly as they think it should, Sarai suggests that it may be God's will that they have a child via her maid, Hagar. Abram agrees, and Hagar gets pregnant. Afterward, Sarai becomes jealous and mistreats her maid. The angel of the Lord finds Hagar by a spring in the desert, and they have this exchange.


He said, "Hagar, Sarai's maid, where have you come from

and where are you going?" And she said, I am fleeing

from the presence of my mistress Sarai." Then the angel 

of the Lord said to her, "Return to your mistress and submit

yourself to her authority." Moreover, the angel of the Lord

said to her, "I will greatly multiply your descendants so that

they will be too many to count." (Genesis 16:8-10)


     It is interesting to note that this messenger of God gives Hagar a promise based on His own authority. He tells her, "I will multiply your descendants." After uttering more prophetic-and let's face it, omniscient-promises about her child (verse 12), we see Hagar's response to the exchange.


Then she called the name of the Lord who spoke to her, "You

are a God who sees;" for she said, "Have I even remained alive

here after seeing Him?" Therefore, the well was called Beer-

lahal-rol; behold it is between Kadesh and Bered. (Genesis 16:13-14).


      Hagar recognizes that she's speaking to divinity and is even surprised that she's 

allowed to live after seeing Him. As testimony to this experience, she named the spring

"The well of the living one who sees me."


  CHEAT SHEET


1. Omniscience: Tells Hagar the future of her descendants.

2. Omnipotence: Promises to make a specific future occur.

3. Recognized as God: Hagar calls the angel a "A God who sees."

4. Correlation with Christ: This exchange has a familiar tenderness to it that we recognize from Jesus' comforting presence in the gospels. Like the women caught in adultery (John 8:1-11). Hagar has been misused, and the angel comes alongside her in a sympathetic and understanding way. 


  ABRAHAM AND THE ANGEL OF THE LORD (GENESIS 22:11-12)


      The next time we see the angel, Abraham and Isaac are on their way up Mount Moriah to make a sacrifice. Isaac doesn't know that he is going to be the sacrifice. God asked Abraham to sacrifice his son, and Abraham is heading up the mountain to show his obedience.


But the angel of the Lord called to him from heaven and said,

"Abraham, Abraham!" and he said "Here I am." He said "Do not

stretch out your hand against the lad, and do nothing to him;

for now, I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld

your son, your only son, from Me." (Genesis 22:11-12)


      Remember, God is the one that asked Abraham to sacrifice Isaac. When the angel stops him, He acknowledges Abraham's compliance by referring to God in the first person; "You have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me."


  CHEAT SHEET


1. Identifies as God: The angel links himself as the God who commanded Abraham's sacrifice. 


  JACOB AND THE ANGEL OF THE LORD (Genesis 31:13)


      Abraham's grandson Jacob was traveling and stopped for an evening rest. While he was sleeping, he had his famous dream about the ladder (Genesis 28:12). During this dream, God spoke to Jacob and told him that the land he was lying on would be given to his descendants. Those ancestors would be abundant, and they would be a blessing to the rest of the world (verses 13-14).


When Jacob awoke the next morning, he put up a pillar of

remembrance and called the place Bethel, meaning "The

house of God."


      Many years later, Jacob has married two daughters of an unscrupulous man named Laban. After much suffering at Laban's hand, Jacob finds himself being cheated out of livestock. In another vision, the angel of God appears to Jacob to help remedy the situation. In the midst of that conversation, the angel says something very curious.


"I am the God of Bethel, where you anointed a pillar, where you

made a vow to Me; now arise, leave this land, and return to the

land of your birth" (Genesis 31:13.


 CHEAT SHEET


1. Identifies as God: The angel describes Himself as the God who previously interacted with Jacob.


 MOSES AND THE ANGEL OF GOD (Exodus 3)


       After killing an Egyptian for mistreating Jewish slaves, Moses fled and took up a whole new life as a shepherd and husband. One day while pasturing his fathers-in-laws

flock, he had a profound experience with the angel of the Lord.


The angel of the Lord appeared to him in a blazing fire from the

midst of the bush; and he looked and behold, the bush was burning

with fire, yet the bush was not consumed, so Moses said, "I must

turn aside now and see this marvelous sight, why the bush is not

burned up.


When the Lord saw that he turned aside to look, God called to

him from the midst of the bush and said, "Moses, Moses!" And he

said, "Here I am." Then He said, "Do not come near here; remove

your sandals from your feet, for the place on which you are

standing is holy ground." He said also, "I am the God of Jacob."

Then Moses hid his face, for he was afraid to look at God (Exodus 31:1-6).


    If you're not paying attention, it's easy to miss the fact that it's the angel of the Lord that appears to Moses in the bush. After all, it only mentions the word angel once. Throughout the rest of the exchange, we're told that Moses is speaking to God. In fact, it's during this exchange that God's name is revealed.


Then Moses said Go, "Behold, I am going to the sons of Israel,

and I will say to them, 'The God of your father's has sent Me to 

you! Now they may say to me. 'What is His name?' What shall I

say to them?" God said to Moses, "I Am Who I Am"; and He said, 

"Thus, you shall say to the sons of Israel, "I Am, has sent me to you"

(Exodus 3:13-14).


    If Exodus 3 was the only biblical proof that there was something fishy going on with the "angel of the Lord," it would be enough. It's possible that the angel is operating here as God's receptionist, grabbing Moses attention and then following it up with a "please hold for the almighty God." But that is not very likely (especially with the other evidence available). To really grasp the implications of this passage, it's good to read the entire chapter.


  CHEAT SHEET


1. Identifies as God: If we weren't told at the beginning this was an angel, we wouldn't even know it. The rest of the narrative shows Moses speaking to God.

2. Recognized as God: Moses turns his face away because he is afraid to look upon God. (verse 6)

3. Demands worship: The angel tells Moses to remove his shoes because the ground in the angel's presence is holy.

4. Omniscience: The angel tells Moses He has heard the cries of the afflicted in Egypt (verse 7).

5. Omnipotence: The angel's message is that He will use Moses to deliver his people. Throughout the exchange the angel promises to display His power to Egypt.

6. Omnipresence: When Moses expresses doubt, the angel promises to be with him (verse 12).

7. Immutability: When the angel reveals the name of God as "I Am," it signifies God's timeless and unchangeable nature.

8. Correlation with Christ: Here we see the angel of the Lord demonstrating a characteristic we recognize from Jesus' ministry. He is empowering Moses to release his people from bondage (Luke 4:16-21).


  THE ANGEL OF THE LORD AS PROTECTOR (Exodus 14:19-20)


   The Israelites might have escaped Egypt, but they're still incredibly vulnerable. 

In Exodus 13, we're told:  


The Lord was going before them in a pillar of cloud by day to lead

them on the way, and in a pillar of fire by night to give them light,

that they might travel by day and by night. He did not take away

the pillar of cloud by day, nor the pillar of fire by night, from before

the people (Exodus 13:21-22).


    As Pharoah changes his mind and comes after the Israelites, we see God's

strategy shift from leading Israel to standing guard between Egypt's army and Israel. Only this time, the identity of the protector changes.


The angel of God, who had been going before the camp of Israel,

moved and went behind them; and the pillar of cloud moved from

before them and stood behind them. So, it came between the

camp of Egypt and the camp of Israel: and there was the cloud

along with the darkness, yet it gave light at night. Thus, the one did

not come near the other all night (Exodus 14:19-20).


   The pillars of cloud and fire that had been leading the Israelites were linked 

to the Lord, but then it's identified with the angel of the Lord. This is another clear example where the two identities are used interchangeably. 


  CHEAT SHEET


1. Identified as God: At one moment the guiding phenomenon is linked to God, and later as the angel of the Lord.


 THE ANGEL OF THE LORD AND BALAAM


         Balaam was an unfaithful prophet who used God's power to make money as a soothsayer to Balak, the king of Moab. To Balaam's credit, where Balak wanted him to curse the Israelites, Balaam continually pronounced God's words of blessing to them. But the fact that Balaam kept interacting with Balak's elders and even wanted to pronounce a curse on Israel to earn some extra coin (Deuteronomy 23:3-6) made Balaam a terrible prophet whose main concern was "the wages of unrighteousness" (2 Peter 2:15-16). On a trip to visit Balak, God intervened:


But God was angry because he was going, and the angel of

the Lord took His stand in the way as an adversary against him.

Now he was riding on his donkey and his two servants were 

with him. When the donkey saw the angel of the Lord standing

in the way with His drawn sword in His hand, the donkey turned

off from the way and went into the field; But Balaam struck

the donkey to turn her back into the way. Then the angel of the

Lord stood in a narrow path of the vineyards, with a wall on this

side and a wall on that side.


   While we often see the angel of the Lord speaking as God-and being recognized as such, we can clearly see a distinction being made between God and the angel of the Lord. We can potentially see this contrast a pre-New Testament clue to the Trinity. The donkey is aware of the angel's presence, but Balaam is not. Unable to get around the divine obstacle, the donkey lays down. And in his anger to get the donkey

to move, Balaam begins striking the donkey. God opens the mouth of the donkey

and immediately the frustrated animal begins chewing out the prophet, "What have I

done to you, that you have struck me these three times? Am I not your donkey on 

which you have ridden all your life to this day? Have I ever been accustomed to do

so, to you?" (Numbers 22:28-3)). God immediately opens Balaam's eyes so he can see

what's going on:


Then the Lord opened the eyes of Balaam, and he saw the

angel of the Lord standing in the way with His drawn sword

in His hand: and he bowed all the way to the ground. The

angel of the Lord said to him, "Why have you struck your 

donkey these three times? Behold, I have come out as an

adversary, because your way was contrary to Me. But the

donkey saw Me and turned aside from Me these three times.

If she had not turned aside from Me, I would have surely

killed you just now and let her live (numbers 22:31-33).


   As we've seen in past examples, the angel takes Balaam's disobedience personally He doesn't merely speak on God's behalf; He says, "your way was contrary to Me" (verse 32). To add an extra layer of autonomy and authority to the discussion, the angel says that He planned to kill the prophet if things had gone another way.


   CHEAT SHEET


1. Distinct from God: Here we see both God and the angel of the Lord as separate agents in the same story.

2. Identified as God: The angel identifies Balaam's sin as a personal affront.

3. Sovereignty: The angel talks about potentially taking Balaam's life, but it doesn't appear to be an order. The comment is delivered in a way that indicates the angel's own authority.


 THE ANGEL OF THE LORD CONFRONTS ISRAEL (Judges 2:1-5)


 Judges is a book that chronicles Israel's tendency toward rebellion. Right out of the gate, the angel of the Lord rebukes the wayward nation:


Now the Lord came up from Gilgal to Bochim, and He said, "I

brought you up out of Egypt and led you into the land which

I have sworn to your fathers; and I said, "I will never break

My covenant you, and as for you, you shall make no covenant

with the inhabitants of this land; you shall tear down their

 alters! But you have not obeyed Me; what is this you have done?"


"Therefore, I also said, "I will not drive them out before you; but

they will come as thorns in your sides and their gods will be a 

snare to you." When the angel of the Lord spoke these words 

to all the sons of Israel, the people lifted up their voices and

wept. So, they named that place Bochim; and there they

sacrificed to the Lord (Judges (2:1-5).


   Notice the angel of the Lord points to Himself as the one who delivered Israel from the Egyptians, is the keeper of Israel's covenant, and requires obedience. As a

consequence of their insubordination, the angel informs the Hebrew nation that He's

withdrawing His protection from them.


 CHEAT SHEET


1. Identifies as God: Throughout this passage, the angel takes credit for things the entire Biblical witness associates with God.


 THE ANGEL OF THE LORD COMMISSIONS SAMSON (Judges 13)


   Before the mighty Samson was born, the angel of the Lord came to Manoah and his wife to inform them that their son would deliver Israel from the Philistines. He first appeared to Manoah's wife, and she described him to her husband as looking like a man,

but having the appearance of an (awesome) angel of God (Judges 13:6). So, despite the fact that this messenger doesn't have wings, there is something in the angel's

appearance and authority that indicates He's more than human. After an intense experience (seriously, you just need to read the whole thing). Manoah tells his wife, "We 

surely will die, for we have seen God" (verse22). At one point during their exchange, 

Manoah asked the angel for His name. The angel replied, "why do you ask My name, seeing it is wonderful?" The word the angel used for wonderful is closely related to the word Isaiah uses to describe the coming Messiah:


For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us;

And His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty 

God. Eternal Father, Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9:6).


   CHEAT SHEET


1. Sovereignty: The angel informs Manoah and his wife how He plans to use Samson.

2. Accepts Worship: When Manoah offers to sacrifice a goat to the angel, the angel tells him to sacrifice it to the Lord. But the author of Judges tells us that the angel only said that because Manoah didn't understand who he was talking to (verses 15-16). When it's all over and Manoah is worried about being killed for seeing God, his wife tells him, "If the Lord had desired to kill us, He would not have accepted a burnt offering and a grain offering from our hands..." (verse 23).

3. Correlation with Christ: The angel of the Lord refuses to give Manoah His name because it is wonderful (or incomprehensible), which seems to hint to His identity as Wonderful, Counselor, and Mighty God (Isaiah 9:6).


  THE ANGEL OF THE LORD AND DAVID'S DISOBEDIENCE (Chronicles 21)


  First Chronicles 21 tells us that Satan influenced David to number Israel. It seems that David wanted to celebrate in the strength of his army. In His anger, the Lord allows David to choose from three equally terrifying judgements; three years of famine, three months of being overrun by enemies, or three days of pestilence and destruction in Israel. David chose the latter (1 Chronicles 21:11-13). After 70,000 Israelite males fell to illness, God sent the angel of the Lord to destroy Jerusalem, but at the last moment called off the destruction (verse 15). David in seeing the angel of the Lord with His sword drawn over Jerusalem, repented and begged for God to take His wrath out on David's household and not on Israel. The angel of the Lord commanded David to build an alter on the thrashing floor of a Jebusite named Ornan. So David negotiated a fair price for the site, bult the alter, and offered burnt offering and peace offering. When he had done this, God commanded the angel of the Lord to sheath His sword (verses 18-27). In this story, we see the angel of the Lord executing Gods judgment. This is in keeping with some of the language and imagery of the New Testament regarding Jesus. In Revelation 19, we see Jesus returning, as the earth's judge. And Jesus Himself says that the Father doesn't judge anyone, but that the judgment belongs to the Son (John 5:22).


 CHEAT SHEET


1. Correlation with Christ: The Angel of the Lord executes Judgment over Jerusalem, a role associated with Jesus.


 THE ANGEL OF THE LORD AND ZECHARIAH (Zechariah 1:12, 3:4


  Zechariah's prophesies give us the clearest picture of the angel of the Lord operating in a way we normally associate with Jesus. The book begins by showing God's frustration with Israel. Zechariah experiences a vision of the angel of the Lord, and at one-point, the angel speaks to heaven, "O Lord of hosts, how long will you have no compassion for Jerusalem and the cities of Judah, with which You have been indignant these seventy years?" (Zechariah 1:12). In Zecheriah's third chapter we see this scene:


Then he showed me Joshua the high priest standing before the

angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his right hand to

accuse him. The Lord said to Satan, "The Lord rebuke you, Satan!

Indeed, the Lord who has chosen Jerusalem rebuke you! Is this not

a brand plucked from the fire?"


Now Joshua was clothed with filthy garments and standing before

the angel. He spoke and said to those who were standing before

him, saying, "Remove the filthy garments from him." Again, He said

to him, "See I have taken your iniquity away from you and will clothe

you with festal robes." Then I said, "Let them put a clean turban on

his head." So, they put a clean turban on his head and clothed him

with garments, while the angel of the Lord was standing by.


And the angel of the Lord admonished Joshua, saying, "Thus says

the Lord of hosts, "If you will walk in My ways and if you will perform My

service, then you will also govern My house and also have charge

of My courts, and I will grant you free access among those who are

standing here (Zechariah 3:1-7).


   If there is a more perfect image of Christ's ministry in the Old Testament, I don't know what it is. Here we see the angel of the Lord standing between Satan's accusations and Joshua the high priest. Then the angel takes away Joshua's iniquity, which is symbolized by filthy garments. The prophet Isaiah uses the same metaphor when he says, "For all of us have become like one who is unclean. And all our righteous deeds are like a filthy garment" (Isaiah 64:6a). It's Jesus whose righteousness replaces our inequity, and this expressed with a similar metaphor in Revelation:


He who overcomes will thus be clothed in white garment; and I

will not erase his name from the book of life, and I will confess his

name before My Father and before His angels (Revelations 3:5).


  CHEAT SHEET


1. Correlation with Christ: Zechariah portrays the angel of the Lord as a mediator for Israel, an opponent of Satan, and a purifier of the righteous. These are all ministries associated with Jesus in the New Testament.


  IS THE ANGEL OF THE LORD JESUS?


   This is just a smattering of encounters with the angel of the Lord. But it's fairly

evident that these are actually stories of pre-incarnate encounters with Jesus. They feature all the hallmarks of the second person of the Trinity.


  THE ANGEL OF THE LORD IS GOD


1. He speaks of Abraham's willingness to sacrifice Isaac as obedience to Him (Genesis 22:12).

2. The angel identifies Himself to Moses as "I AM" (Exodus 3:14).

3. After his experience with the angel, Manoah is afraid that he won't live after looking upon God (Judges 13:22).


  THE ANGEL OF THE LORD IS DISTINCT FROM GOD


1. The angel shows up with Balaam in response to God's anger (Numbers 22:22).

2. God dispatches the angel of the Lord to carry out justice (1 Chronicles 21).

3 The angel entreats God on behalf of Israel (Zechariah 1:12).


  THE ANGEL OF THE LORD CARRIED OUT WORK ASSOCIATED WITH CHRIST


1. The angel displays the same kind of comfort with Hagar that we associate with Jesus (Genesis 16:7-14).

2> The angel is a deliverer from bondage in Egypt, just as Jesus delivers people from physical and spiritual shackles in the New Testament (Exodus 3:8).

3. The angel removes the stain of the high priest's sin similar to Christ's ministry to us (Zechariah 3:4).

       

  STORIES OF THE PRE-INCARNATE CHRIST


   It's no wonder that the early church fathers like Tertullian and Justin Martyr

recognized that these encounters as glimpses of the timeless Christ. And it's revelations like these-ones that come in retrospect-that give the Bible a sense of coherence and trustworthiness. If the Trinity is true and Jesus is a member of the Godhead, you would expect to see Him at work throughout the story of Israel told in the Old Testament. And as it turns out, you do. Jesus is at work as an angel of God, carrying out a very similar ministry that we recognize in His incarnation.                        

        


The messiah part 5

The year Jesus was born.

 

      A consensus of scholar's state that Jesus was born sometime between 6 and 5 B.C.


      Luke chapter 2 1-3: Now it came to pass in those days that a decree went out from Caesar Augustus, that a census be taken of all the inhabited earth. This was the first census taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. And all were proceeding to register for the census, everyone to his own city. New American Standard Bible


       Mainstream "Biblical Scholars" according to Wikipedia and other publications have stated the Gospel of Luke contains errors. These scholars point out a few criticisms.

1. Matthew and Luke state that Jesus was born before the death of Herod and not 10 years later when Quirinius was governor of Syria in 6 A.D.

2. There was no single census of the entire Roman empire under Augustus.

3. The Romans did not directly tax client kingdoms like Herod's domain.

4.No Roman census required that people travel from their own homes to those of their ancestors.

5. Scholars presuppose (without evidence) that Luke made up the census so that Joseph and Mary would have an excuse to travel from Nazareth to Bethlehem in order to fulfill Bible prophecy.

6. They also state that Matthew and Luke give different accounts of the family's departure from Bethlehem. 

     

      The archaeologist William Ramsay was skeptical of Luke when he started his research. He traveled throughout Asia Minor for thirty-four years following Luke's account of Paul's journeys in the book of Acts. At the end of that time, he found "that all of my prepossessions and preformed opinions were wrong." (1) He came to the conclusion that Luke was a first-rate historian. Bryan Windle states the best translation of Luke 2:2 is the New King James version of the bible that Quirinius was not governor of Syria but that that he was "governing" Syria. Luke uses the Greek verb "Hegemoneuo" which means that Quirinius was exercising authority in some capacity in Syria during the "first census." (2) Secular scholars are happy to conclude that Luke made a mistake, confusing the census in 6 A.D. when Quirinius governor or simply making up one before Herod's death.   

       However, as many conservative scholars have noted, Luke mentions the 6 A.D. census in Acts 5:37, showing he was referring to an earlier unknown census by modern scholars in Luke chapter 2. 


        THE ROMAN SYSTEM UNDER AUGUSTUS


       Historian Bryan Windle has shown the Roman system under Augustus could be fluid.

Caesar Augustus would typically appoint one Roman governor to a province. However, in "extraordinary circumstances, usually involving wars or putting down rebellions, he and his successors dispatched if needed a second imperial legate to lead a war effort and to deal with other external affairs while the resident governor managed the normal domestic affairs of a province. "For example, when the Jews rebelled against Rome, Vespasian was dispatched as imperial legate to crush it in 67 A.D. While Mucionus was the resident governor in Syria taking care of domestic affairs, Vespasian launched his attack from Syria into Judea. Likewise, during the Roman-Parthian war in 63-68 A.D, Corbola was dispatched to lead the Roman army in Syria against the Parthians while Quadratus the resident governor managed local affairs." (3) In 12 B.C. a rebellion broke out in Asia Minor and Augustus sent his consul, one of his most capable generals, Quirinius to deal with the problem. Quirinius arrived in Syria around 12 B.C. while Titius was governor and most likely took control of the three legions stationed there to prosecute the war in Asia Minor. In 9 B.C. Titius was succeeded by Saturninus as governor of Syria. Josephus mentions that there were two Roman governors of Syria at that time. He stated that Herod had to get permission from both of them to launch an attack against Arabia around 9 B.C. (4) In 6 B.C. during the last years of Herod the Great, Varus took over as Legate of the province.  "Augustus may have considered Varus a capable commander and not an exceptionally gifted one" since he was only sent to provinces that were considered to be pacified. (5)

       

       Quirinius would have launched his campaign into Asia (Galatia) from Syria and according to Pliny, Tacitus states this people were one of "the most barbarous tribes" and that their land contained "forty-four fortresses." (6) "They were conquered in the time of Augustus." (7) Strabo said Cyrinius (Quirinius) "overthrew their country and captured alive four-thousand men"..."leaving their country destitute of all its men." (8) The war must have been over by 6 B.C. when the network of Roman roads were laid out and completed in Galatia. (9) Quirinus was probably named legate of Galatia (10) and led the legions back to Antioch Syria where they were stationed. There were no Roman troops permanently stationed in Galatia and Roman veteran colonies served as the military defense of the province. (11) After Quirinius finished his campaign, there was no reason to stay in a province devoid of troops. Quirinius would have most likely stayed in Antioch with the legions he had once commanded, in the event Augustus called upon him again for service. He would have governed his province remotely in the same way that Marcus Agrippa "administered Syria for ten years, through deputies from the Island of Lesbos." (12) Quirinius would have remained in Antioch Syria, the center for Roman power in the East until 2 B.C, when he returned to Rome. Hallak states that in the province of Egypt "The evidence suggests that in the Augustan period there was no fixed order for offices: officials could be moved from one post to another according to local need and could hold two or three posts at the same time... (13) So Quirinus would have been positioned in Syria, right where Luke said he was, in the last years of Herod the Great. Goldsworthy states it is possible Quirinius could have been legate of Syria for a few months while Varus was governing Syria, however, he considers it unlikely. (14) When Herod the Great was summoned by Mark Anthony to leave his kingdom and go to Laodicea, in Asia Minor, he made his uncle temporary procurator of Judea. This shows there was never a void in Roman government, someone was always left in charge, when a king or governor was away. (15)


       NOTES: (1) William Mitchell Ramsay, The Bearing of Recent Discovery on the Trustworthiness of the New Testament, p.31; (2) and (3) Bryan Windle, The Bible Archaeology Report, Where does Quirinius fit in? December 19, 2019; (4) The New Complete Works by Josephus, translated by William Whiston, Jewish Antiquities, Chapter 9, 1, p.544; (5) Adrian Goldsworthy, Augustus, (5) p.447; (6), (7) and (8) Bryan Windle, The Bible Archaeology Report, Where does Quirinius fit in? (9) Jack Finegan, The Handbook of Biblical Chronology, p.302; (10) and (11) Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution, (10) P.399 and (11) p.393; (12) Adrian Goldsworthy, Augustus, p.272; (13) Hassna Hallak, Capponi: Augustan Egypt, The Creation of a Roman Province, p. 35; (14) Adrian Goldsworthy, Augustus, p.489; (15) The New complete works of Josephus, Translated by William Whiston, Commentary by Paul L. Maier, Jewish Antiquities, Book 15, chapter 3, 5.


         THE ROMAN CENSUS


       Critics of Luke state that Augustus never initiated an empire wide census during his reign. However, "Our understanding of the Augustan census is hindered by the scarcity of documents. Up to a certain point in the reign of Augustus or Tiberius, for instance, the census may be based on oral reports to officials rather than written self-declarations" (16) Hallak argues "It is not impossible that Augustus took a multi-provincial census at the beginning of his reign, after completing the census of Roman citizens in 28 B.C. In the years of 27 to 25 B.C. he held provincial censuses in Gaul, probably in Spain and possibly also in Egypt." (17) I think it makes sense that there was an empire wide census at that time as Augustus was organizing his empire after the defeat of Anthony and Cleopatra. "No other Source (besides Luke) mentions a single decree imposing a census and levy throughout the provinces. This does not mean we can say with absolute certainty that Augustus never issued such a decree, but it does mean that we should be cautious..." (18) "What is clear that under Augustus the taxation system of the empire was tidied up...As a part of this process-most perhaps all-provinces were subjected to one or more censuses..." (19) There seems to have been a bias by the ancient writers concerning the provinces. "It should not surprise us in any way, as there was no reason for Greek or Roman accounts to mention the birth of anyone in the provinces." (20) I think it would also be true that only Luke mentions the empire-wide census, because it was important to his narrative. The Greek and Roman writers didn't seem to be concerned much with the provinces unless a war happened, or a Greek or Roman went there.


        "According to Bagnall and Frier the Roman census registered everyone" in Egypt. (21) We know that in 47/48 A.D. there was a census in Egypt of both Roman citizens and the general population at the same time. (22) "It is likely that in spite of its peculiar history and culture, Egypt was similar to other Roman provinces, such as Syria, or the Greek provinces in Asia minor." (23) The Romans under Augustus undertook regular censuses in Egypt every seven years from 26/25, 19/18, and 12/10 B.C. (24) In Rome Augustus held censuses in 28 B.C. and about 12/10 B.C. of Roman citizens. (25) The 12/10 census in Rome was completed in 8 B.C. (26) So, in 12/10 B.C. there was an on-going census in Rome and Egypt at or around the same time. As Bryan Windle and John Elder have noted, "this seems to be the empire wide census spoken of by Luke." (27) After the 12/10 B.C. census, Augustus changed the census to every 14 years in Rome. So, the 12/10 census seems to be the beginning of a new system of registration for taxation, as Augustus continued to reorganize and streamline his empire. Also, a papyrus dated to 104 A.D. records a Roman governor in Egypt who ordered Egyptians to return to their ancestral homes so a census could be taken. (28)


       NOTES: (16) and (17) Hassna Hallak, Capponi: Augustan Egypt, Creation of a Roman Province, (16) p.83 and (17) p.89; (18), (19) and (20) Adrian Goldsworthy, Augustus, (18) p.488, (19) p.488, (20) p.487; (21), (22), (23) and (24) Hassna Hallak, Capponi: Augustan Egypt, The creation of a Roman Province, (21) p.87, (22) p.87, (23) p.63, (24) p.91; (25) Bryan Windle, Caesar Augustus, An Archeology Biography, December 13, 2019; (26) Adrian Goldsworthy, Augustus, p.381; (27) Bryan Windle, Caesar Augustus An Archaeology Biography, December 13, 2019, also John Elder, Elder, 3. 1960, Prophets, Idols and Diggers; (28) Krista Wenzell, December 23, 2014, Was there really a census during the time of Caesar Augustus?


       HEROD THE GREAT


        When the Roman general Pompey the Great, swept through Syria with his powerful legions, Herod's father Antipater, a wealthy Arab decided it was useless to resist and decided to help them.  After Pompey conquered Jerusalem in 62 B.C., he left Antipater in charge of Judea, and Herod was given Gallilee to rule by his father. (29) Herod cultivated friendships with powerful Romans like Mark Anthony, and this benefited him in the future. In 37 B.C. the Parthians invaded Judea and drove Herod out of the land, so he sailed to Rome to see what could be done. When Herod arrived in Rome, he was tall, muscular, and looked like the natural leader the Romans were seeking to recapture Jerusalem. (30) Mark Anthony and Octavian promoted Herod to be the new King of the Jews, and the Roman Senate agreed, sending him back to Judea at the age of 33 with an army. After a four-month siege, Herod recaptured Jerusalem and reestablished control of the land. (31) For the remainder of his long reign, he would rule his kingdom with an iron grip, ruthlessly disposing of his enemies, real and imagined. When his patron Mark Anthony was defeated in the Roman civil war at Actium in 31 B.C, Herod knew his life was in danger, since he had supported Anthony and Cleopatra in the war. Herod gathered all the treasure he could get his hands on and rushed to meet Octavian, the winner of the war, on the island of Rhodes. He laid the treasure and his crown at the feet of Octavian and stated he had been a loyal friend and supporter of Anthony and that if given the chance he would be the same devoted friend to Octavian himself. Octavian took the crown and placed it back on Herod's head and reestablished him in his kingdom. (32)


        Herod kept that promise to Augustus, but late in his reign in 8 B.C. an incident occurred which would cause a crisis in his kingdom. Some outlaws from Arabia were raiding into Herod's kingdom and as said before, he went to the two Roman governors of Syria, Saturninus and Volumnius and asked permission from both of them to launch an attack against the bandits. The two Romans gave their consent and Herod's army invaded Arabia, defeated the robbers, scattered them, and took prisoners. However, an Arabian at Augustus court heard about the incident and accused Herod of unjustly laying waste to Arabia and killing many important people. Augustus was furious with Herod for disturbing the Roman peace and operating his army outside Judea without cause. (33)

         Augustus sent a scathing letter to Herod and demoted him from "friend of Rome" to a subject Kingdom. (34) This letter downgraded Judea into just another province of the empire and removed the special status of Herod's kingdom. This demotion meant that Augustus would make Judea subject to the taxation (35) that was going on across the empire in 12/10 B.C. according to Luke. It took Herod about a year to smooth things over with Augustus and make known the true version of events, but once the emperor gave the order to tax the kingdom it would not be revoked.


         About a year later in 7 B.C. Herod's status as "friend of Rome" was restored, but he was hated by his people for the brutality of his reign as well as the fact that he was considered a foreigner. (36) He executed several of his wives and many others he felt were threats to his power. As his health declined in his last years on the throne, he was haunted by plots against his life. That same year Antipater, Herod's eldest son wanted to eliminate two of his young brothers who were popular with the people. Antipater made accusations against them and convinced his father to put them on trial for sedition. With permission from Augustus, the boys were given a sham trial in Syria. Herod himself gave a rambling incoherent speech against his sons. (37) They were eventually executed along with three hundred solders who spoke in their defense. (38) Herod's apparent decline was possibly the result of circulatory failure. Fluid built up in his lower body and he suffered fatigue, metal lapses and frequent rages. (39) By late 6 B.C. Herod was convinced by his sister, that his son Antipater was plotting against him, and he recalled him from Rome. At the same time Herod asked Varus, the new Roman governor of Syria to join him in Jerusalem as a "councilor and give advice in his present affairs." (40)


         THE BIRTH OF JESUS CHRIST


         I believe Jesus was born early in the year 5 B.C. just before Antipater was put on trial for treason in that same year. Augustus wanted the new Roman governor of Syria Varus, to preside over the trial and make sure "that Roman legal procedures were followed." (

     

       THE WISE MEN


       The Wise Men were called Maji in the Middle East. The Greek Historian Xenophon said the Maji "were authorities for all religious matters." (30) Another Greek writer Lucian said he visited the Maji in Babylon. (31) The Maji are mentioned in Jeremiah 39:3, "Nergal-sar-ezar, the Rag-mag." The Maji are also referred to in Babylon, at Nebuchadnezzar's palace in the book of Daniel, 1:20; 2:2; 4:7 and 5:11. (32) They were experts in both astronomy and astrology and also were advisors to kings in the middle east during the empires of Babylon and Persia. They were certainly called priests in the Persian empire (33) and some call them kingmakers. (34) Most of them were involved in the occult, but because of Daniel the prophet, a few of them must have believed in and worshiped the one true God. (35) According to Josephus there were Jews in great numbers in Parthian Babylonia which may have given the Maji access to many of the books of the Old Testament. (36) In the late 1600's two brilliant minds argued about who invented Calculus first. Sir Isaac Newton and the Mathematician Gottfried Leibniz each accused one another of stealing each other's work. (37) However, clay tablets were discovered in Babylon and were dated from 350 B.C. to near the birth of Christ. No one could make sense of these tablets until 2015 when a retired archaeologist Ossendrijver of Humboldt University in Berlin took a look at and deciphered them. These tablets revealed there were some very wise men in Babylon who were using Calculus to chart the movements of stars and planets in the heavens, long before Sir Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz.  Alexander Jones professor at New York University praised Ossendrijver's work, which he said shows the "revolutionary brilliance of the unknown Mesopotamian scholars." (38) 

     

        The appearance of wise men from the east - which suggests outside the (Roman) empire and probably the heartland of the Parthian empire - is perfectly possible, since plenty of traders made that journey. (39) Babylon was certainly a part of the heartland of the Parthian empire at that time. The scriptures say the arrival of the Maji in Jerusalem caused great consternation with Herod and the people.. The Maji made known to Herod they were following a star and perhaps they were influenced in part by the Old Testament. Numbers 24:17, "a star shall come forth from Jacob, and a scepter shall rise from Israel." (41) No one knows what the star was, but it may have been a supernatural phenomenon since it moved across the sky. The star disappeared while the Maji were in Jerusalem, but it reappeared later according to Matthew 2:9. (42)


        Matthew 2:1-3, Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the King, behold Magi from the east arrived in Jerusalem saying "Where is he who is born King of the Jews? For we saw His star in the east and have come to worship Him." And when Herod the king heard it, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him. 

       


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  • THE MESSIAH PART 4

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