Showing posts with label Herod the Great. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herod the Great. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2019

Eusebius, EH.1.8: The Death of Herod the Great



Image: The funeral procession of Herod the Great to his mausoleum at Herodium in 4 BC. Illustration by Hong Nian Zhang.

A new installment has been post to the series on Eusebius of Caesarea’s The Ecclesiastical History: book 1, chapter 8 (Listen here):

Notes and Commentary:

This chapter describes the ignoble end of Herod the Great and recalls the Biblical adage that as a man sows, so shall he reap (cf. Gal 6:7).

Eusebius draws on Matthew’s account of the visit of the magi at the birth of Jesus and the massacre of the innocents in Bethlehem.

He also draws on the accounts in Josephus, from both his Antiquities of the Jews and the Jewish War, of Herod’s miserable suffering with disease, including gangrene in his genitals and “breeding worms”, his plan to take captive and murder a crowd in the Hippodrome so that there would be weeping at his death, and the murder of a third son before his death.

Eusebius sees Herod’s suffering was an act of God’s justice for his murder of the innocents at Bethlehem.

Lastly, he returns to Matthew’s account of Joseph bringing Jesus to Galilee from Egypt at Herod the Great’s death.

JTR

Saturday, March 09, 2019

Eusebius, EH.1.6: Christ and Herod



Image: Bronze prutah (small value coin) from the rule of Herod of the Great (c. 37-4 BC).


A new installment to the series on Eusebius of Caesarea’s The Ecclesiastical History has been posted, book 1, chapter 6. Listen here.

Notes and Commentary:

Eusebius here focuses on the fact that Jesus was born during the reign of Herod, who was the first, as he sees it, non-Jewish king of Israel. Herod, if an Idumean on his father’s side and an Arab on his mother’s side, was “the first foreigner to hold the sovereignty of the Jewish nation.”

For Eusebius this fulfilled Genesis 49:10: “A ruler shall not fail from Judah nor a leader from his loins until he comes for whom it is reserved.”

He also sees the birth of Jesus as fulfilling a prophecy of Daniel 9:24-27, regarding “the number of certain weeks” and the coming of the Messiah.

We see again how Eusebius sees continuity OT prediction and NT fulfillment.

JTR