TedM wrote:I posted similar thoughts on the thread about Paul believing Jesus had come as a human being sometime in the past, but decided this perhaps should have its own thread.
The idea is simple. There were two beliefs around the turn of the century 2000 years ago re the Messianic passages of writings considered to be scripture:
First, that some kind of Suffering Servant would come to save the the nation from its sins, based greatly on a liberal interpretation of Isaiah 53, and other passages in Isaiah, and some other places.
Second, that the new Kingdom of God was at hand, which would include the judgement of mankind.
The expectation of the coming Judgement allowed for the creative idea that the Suffering Servant had already come to earth and suffered for the people. It wouldn't make sense to judge and condemn and THEN save, would it? No - Save first, then Judge. But also, this Savior was prophesied to be unrecognized as such: Isaiah 53:1
Who has believed our message? And to whom has the arm of the Lord been revealed .. 3. He was despised and forsaken of men
-----------------------------
So, if you were Jewish and had concluded that the end judgement was near, then if you also bought into expectation of a Savior Messiah along the lines of a Suffering Servant, then you would be inclined to consider as legitimate the idea that the Savior had already come but that nobody to date had recognized that fact. This IMO increases the likelihood of accepting that a recent crucified man - Jesus - was that Savior, as well as the likelihood of accepting the idea that the Savior had come sometime in the past - details which were revealed through the study of Messianic passages in the OT and other accepted works at the time.
We tend to think in terms of the orthodox view: First a Savior, and only then start thinking about the end of the world. That sequence makes the stakes much higher for believing that a Savior had come or that any given person was that Savior since the requirements would be put on the actions of that Savior. But Jews 2000 years ago were ALREADY thinking about the end of the world being near while trying to make that jive with a whole jumble of Messianic or possibly Messianic passages, so any theory/idea that the Savior had already come would be ripe for acceptance, and with a lower bar for the level of proof normally required. And if their scriptures seemed to say in some places that he already came ('he was despised and forsaken of men'), that may have been all that was needed for some to believe it.
Perhaps not so coincidentally - This is Paul's Jesus: He came in the past, was unrecognized by the world, very little was known about him beyond what was prophesied, he brought salvation to those who believe in his act of salvation, and he will very soon come again to usher in Judgement.
What more could any messianic Jew possibly want, when looking back at history, than a Roman execution of a King and High Priest of the Jews?? Yes, for some Jews, if Antigonus was hung on a stake:
He was despised and rejected by mankind,
a man of suffering, and familiar with pain.
Like one from whom people hide their faces
he was despised, and we held him in low esteem.
Surely he took up our pain
and bore our suffering,
yet we considered him punished by God,
stricken by him, and afflicted.
Yet...... given time, some messianic Jews could well have created a theological/spiritual story re that historical event. Retelling that historical event 70 years later as the gospel crucifixion and salvation story. The one hung on a stake (Cassius Dio) would be accursed and a stumbling block to many Jews. All it needed was for someone like Paul to take the new story, the new interpretation of history as salvation history, to the Gentiles. (And, obviously, having to minimize, as far as possible, Hasmonean history; history with it's zealot type activity against Rome. Jewish/Hasmonean nationalism could not be allowed to hamper the mission to the Gentiles. After all, the new spiritual kingdom had no need for any nationalistic aspirations - neither Jew nor Greek, all are one in Christ.)
------------
If one wants to argue that Cassius Dio has his facts wrong re Antigonus being hung on a stake and scourged - then one needs to answer this question: Why did Josephus not mention this - stating only that Antigonus was beheaded? Did Josephus really not know the historical details? Or did Josephus find reason to ignore this detail of Antigonus' execution. Josephus, in recording the history of Antigonus, had no reason to let his Jewish sensibilities over the Law impact upon his recording of that history. (he recorded other crucifixions). However, if Josephus had recorded details similar to Cassius Dio - that Antigonus was bound to a stake and scourged prior to being slain (by beheading) then the similarity between that historical event and the gospel Roman execution would be in plain view. Sometimes it is what is not said that can be more relevant than what is said....In other words; Josephus's omission of the details of the execution of Antigonus, allows the gospel crucifixion story to, as it were, stand alone, cut free from Hasmonean history.
(Josephus does of course have his story about his friend being taken down from the cross - after the Jewish War. A friend who survived a crucifixion - to die another day.)
=========================
http://www.bibleinterp.com/articles/201 ... 8018.shtml
''… Romans … hung up alive … killed by gentiles … second half of the 1st century BCE … Roman invasion … Jewish ruler … Roman invasion … executed … Roman invasion … who could this figure alluded to in these texts possibly be?
In what may come to be regarded as one of the more unusual, indeed astonishing, oversights in the history of Qumran scholarship, so far as is known it seems no previous scholar has proposed that Antigonus Mattathias, the last Hasmonean king of Israel, executed by the Romans in 37 BCE, might be the figure underlying the Wicked Priest of Pesher Habakkuk or the doomed ruler of Pesher Nahum. The actual allusion of the figure of these texts, Antigonus Mattathias, remained unseen even though it was always in open view, as obvious as it could be. And in wondering how Antigonus Mattathias was missed in the history of scholarship I include myself, for I too missed this in my 2001 study of Pesher Nahum''.
==============================
Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
W.B. Yeats