To preserve the existence of their nation one other way presented itself.
Continuing The Jews’ Final Revolt Against Rome,
our selection from Charles Merivale. The selection is presented in three easy 5 minute installments.
Previously in The Jews’ Final Revolt Against Rome.
Time: 132
Place: Palestine
To preserve the existence of their nation one other way presented itself. In their sacred books they retained a common bond of law and doctrine, such as no other people could boast. In these venerated records they possessed, whether on the Tiber or the Euphrates, an elixir of unrivalled virtue. With a sudden revulsion of feeling the popular orators and captains betook themselves to the study of law, its history and antiquities, its actual text and its inner meaning. The schools of Tiberias resounded with debate on the rival principles of interpretation, the ancient and the modern, the stricter and the laxer, known respectively by the names of their teachers, Schammai and Hillel.
The doctors decided in favor of the more accommodating system, by which the stern exclusiveness of the original letter was extenuated and the law of the rude tribes of Palestine molded to the varied taste and temper of a cosmopolitan society, while the text itself was embalmed in the Masora, an elaborate system of punctuation and notation, to every particle of which, to insure its uncorrupted preservation, a mystical significance was attached. By this curious contrivance the letter of the Law, the charter of Judaism, was sanctified forever, while its spirit was remodeled to the exigencies of the present or the future, till it would have been no longer recognized by its authors or even by very recent disciples. To this new learning of traditions and glosses the ardent youth of the nation devoted itself with a fanaticism not less vehement than that which had fought and bled half a century before. The name of the rabbi Akiba is preserved as a type of the hierophant of restored Judaism.
The stories depicting him are best expounded as myths and figures. He reached, it was said, the age of a hundred and twenty years, the period assigned in the sacred records to his prototype, the law-giver Moses.
Like David, in his youth he kept sheep on the mountains; like Jacob, he served a master, a rich citizen of Jerusalem, for Jerusalem in his youth was still standing. His master’s daughter cast the eyes of affection upon him and offered him a secret marriage; but this damsel was no other than Jerusalem itself, so often imaged to the mind of the Jewish people by the figure of a maiden, a wife or a widow.
This mystic bride required him to repair to the schools, acquire knowledge and wisdom, surround himself with disciples; and such, as we have seen, was the actual policy of the new defenders of Judaism.
The damsel was rebuked by her indignant father; but when, after the lapse of twelve years, Akiba returned to claim his bride, with twelve thousand scholars at his heels, he heard her replying that, long as he had been absent, she only wished him to prolong his stay twice over, so as to double his knowledge; whereupon he returned patiently to his studies and frequented the schools twelve years longer. Twice twelve years thus passed, he returned once more with twice twelve thousand disciples and then his wife received him joyfully, and, covered as she was with rags, an outcast and a beggar, he presented her to his astonished followers as the being to whom he owed his wisdom, his fame and his fortune.
Such were the legends with which the new learning was consecrated to the defense of Jewish nationality.
The concentration of the Roman forces on the soil of Palestine seems to have repressed for a season all overt attempts at insurrection.
The Jewish leaders restrained their followers from action as long as it was possible to feed their spirit with hopes only. It was not till about the fourteenth year of Hadrian’s reign that the final revolt broke out.
When the Jews of Palestine launched forth upon the war, the doctor Akiba gave place to the warrior Barcochebas. This gallant warrior, the last of the national heroes, received or assumed his title, “the Son of the Star,” given successively to several leaders of the Jewish people, in token of the fanatic expectations of divine deliverance by which his countrymen did not yet cease to be animated. Many were the legends which declared this champion’s claims to the leadership of the national cause. His size and strength were vaunted as more than human. “It was the arm of God, not of man,” said Hadrian when he saw at last the corpse encircled by a serpent, “that could alone strike down the giant.” Flame and smoke were seen to issue from his lips in speaking, a portent which was rationalized centuries later into a mere conjurer’s artifice. The concourse of the Jewish nation at his summons was symbolized, with a curious reference to the prevalent idea of Israel as a school and the Law as a master, by the story that at Bethar, the appointed rendezvous and last stronghold of the national defense, were four hundred academies, each ruled by four hundred teachers, each teacher boasting a class of four hundred pupils.
Akiba, now at the extreme point of his protracted existence, like Samuel of old, nominated the new David to the chiefship of the people. He girded Barcochebas with the sword of Jehovah, placed the staff of command in his hand and held himself the stirrup by which he vaulted into the saddle.
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