Read The Origin of Satan Online
Authors: Elaine Pagels
Tags: #Religion, #Christianity, #History, #Christian Theology, #General, #Angelology & Demonology
more pitiable, so did the mothers do to their infants.”6 Even old
peo-
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ple and children were tortured for stealing food. Finally, when
the Jewish armies could hold out no longer, Roman soldiers
entered the city and swarmed over the great Temple. Titus and
his staff, apparently curious, entered the Holy of Holies, the
sacred room where the ark of the covenant was kept. Roman
soldiers looted the treasury, seizing its priceless gold furniture,
the golden trumpets, and the massive seven-branched
lampstand; then they set the Temple afire and watched it burn.
Later that night they hailed Titus’s victory and in triumph
desecrated the Temple precincts by sacrificing there to their own
gods. Having devastated the Jewish armies, they raped, robbed,
and massacred thousands of Jerusalem’s inhabitants and left the
city in ruins. Josephus, writing from his Roman retirement villa
ten to fifteen years later, no doubt hoped not only to express his
anguish but also to exonerate himself for collaborating with
those who destroyed Jerusalem when he wrote,
O most wretched city, what misery so great as this did you
suffer from the Romans, when they came to purify you from
your internecine hatred!7
Whatever Josephus’s motives, his writing conveys a powerful
impression of the factions that divided Jerusalem, as well as of
the horrifying devastation that the city’s inhabitants suffered.
What makes these events important for my purpose in this
book is that the first Christian gospel was probably written
during the last year of the war, or the year it ended.8 Where it
was written and by whom we do not know; the work is
anonymous, although tradition attributes it to Mark, a younger
co-worker of the apostle Peter. What we do know is that the
author of Mark’s gospel was well aware of the war and took sides
in the conflicts it aroused, both among Jewish groups and
between Jews and Romans.
Mark was writing, after all, about a charismatic Jewish teacher,
Jesus of Nazareth, who thirty-five years before had been
executed by Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea,
apparently on charges of sedition against Rome. Of all that his
followers later
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 7
claimed to know about him, these charges and his crucifixion are
the primary facts on which both Jesus’ followers and his enemies
agree. None of the surviving accounts of Jesus is
contemporaneous with his life, though many people told and
retold stories about him and recounted his sayings and parables.
Dozens—perhaps even hundreds—of accounts were written
about Jesus, including the long-hidden accounts found among
the so-called secret gospels discovered at Nag Hammadi in Upper
Egypt in 1945.9 But of these numerous accounts, only four
gospels are included in the New Testament. The great majority
of those who told and wrote about Jesus did so as his devoted
admirers, some even as his worshipers. But others, including
Josephus himself, as well as the Roman senator Tacitus, writing
c. 115 C.E., mention Jesus and his followers with hostility or
contempt.10 Yet nearly all of these, advocates and adversaries
alike, placed Jesus of Nazareth and the movement he started
within the context of “the recent troubles in Judea.”
According to Mark, Jesus protested at being arrested “like a
robber” (Mark 14:48). The author of Luke, writing some ten to
twenty years later, says that Jesus was charged, like those
crucified along with him, as a robber (Luke 23:40).11 This Greek
term
testes
, literally translated “robber” or “bandit,” was in the
early first century a catchall term for an undesirable, a
troublemaker or criminal. Josephus, however, writing after the
Jewish war against Rome, most often uses the term to
characterize those Jews who were inciting or participating in
anti-Roman activities or in the war against Rome itself.12 I agree
with many other scholars that Jesus himself is unlikely to have
been a revolutionary,13 although each of the four gospels
indicates that the Jewish leaders who brought him to Pilate
accused him of claiming to be “king of the Jews.” According to
Mark, Pilate’s soldiers, aware of the charge, mocked and abused
Jesus as a would-be king of the Jews; apparently the same charge
was inscribed over his cross as a warning to others that Rome
would similarly dispatch anyone accused of insurrection.
The narratives that we know as the New Testament gospels
were written by certain followers of Jesus who lived through the
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war, and who knew that many of their fellow Jews regarded
them as a suspect minority. They wrote their own accounts of
some of the momentous events surrounding the war, and the
part that Jesus played in events preceding it, hoping to persuade
others of their interpretation. We cannot fully understand the
New Testament gospels until we recognize that they are, in this
sense, wartime literature. As noted before, the gospel we call
Mark (although we do not know historically who actually wrote
these gospels, I use their traditional attributions) was written
either during the war itself, perhaps during a temporary lull in
the siege of Jerusalem, or immediately after the defeat, in 70
C.E.14 Matthew and Luke wrote some ten to twenty years later,
each using Mark as his basis and expanding Mark’s narrative with
further sayings and stories. Most scholars believe that John
wrote his gospel, perhaps in Alexandria, about a generation after
the war, c. 90-95 C.E.15
Only one of Jesus’ followers whose writings were later
incorporated into the New Testament—Paul of Tarsus—wrote
before the war and could, of course, say nothing about Jesus in
relation to it. Paul mentions little that concerns Jesus’ biography,
repeating only a few “sayings of the Lord” (Acts 20:35 ).16 What
fascinated Paul about Jesus’ death was not the crucifixion as an
actual event, but what he saw as its profound religious
meaning—that, as he says, “Christ died for our sins” (1 Cor.
15:3), that he became an atonement sacrifice, which, Paul
believed, transformed the relationship between Israel’s God and
the whole human race. If he knew the charges made against
Jesus—that he was one of many Galileans whom Josephus
regards as troublemakers17 for fomenting rebellion against
Rome—Paul apparently regarded these charges as so
transparently false or so irrelevant that they needed no rebuttal.
Paul died c. 64—65 C.E. in Rome, executed, like Jesus, by order
of Roman magistrates.
The catastrophic events of 66-70 permanently changed the
world in which Jews lived, not only in Jerusalem, where charred
rubble replaced the splendid Temple, but also for Jews
throughout the known world. Even those who had never seen
Jerusalem knew that the center of their world had been
shattered. The
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 9
hardships and humiliations of defeat exacerbated long-standing
divisions within the scattered Jewish communities, some of
which had persisted around the eastern Mediterranean for as
many as two hundred years, since the time when the armies of
the Jewish leader Judas Maccabeus had driven out the Syrian
dynasties established by Alexander the Great and had restored
the Jewish state. In 65-70 C.E., these divisions were most
obvious between those who had advocated war with Rome, and
the priestly party, which had worked to keep the fragile peace. In
the aftermath of the war against Rome, power relationships
among various groups within the Jewish communities scattered
around the world from Alexandria and Antioch to Rome shifted
to meet the changing situation. In Jerusalem itself, now that the
Temple was gone and thousands had been killed or had fled, the
priestly class lost much of its influence as other parties jockeyed
for position.
The war and its aftermath polarized followers of Jesus, too, in
relation to other Jewish communities. Followers of Jesus had
refused to fight in the war against the Romans, not because they
agreed with Josephus and others that the Romans were
invincible, or because they hoped for financial or political
advantage. Jesus’ followers believed that there was no point in
fighting the Romans because the catastrophic events that
followed his crucifixion were signs of the end—signs that the
whole world was to be shattered and transformed (Mark 13:4-
29). Some insisted that what they had seen—the horrors of the
war—actually vindicated his call “Repent, for the Kingdom of
God is near” (Mark 1:15). Mark shares the conviction,
widespread among Jesus’ followers, that Jesus himself had
predicted these world-shattering events— the destruction of the
Temple and its desecration:
And as he came out of the Temple, one of his disciples said to
him, “Look, rabbi, what wonderful stones, and what won-
derful buildings!” And Jesus said to him, “Do you see these
great buildings? There will not be left here one stone upon
another, that will not be thrown down. . . . But when you see
the abominable sacrilege set up where it ought not to be (let the
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reader understand!), then let those who are in Judea flee to the
mountains (Mark 13:1-14).”
This was exactly what had now happened. Others believed—
and some dared to say—that these very catastrophes occurred as
an angry God’s punishment upon his own people for the crime of
rejecting their divinely sent Messiah.
In any case, Mark insists that Jesus’ followers had no quarrel
with the Romans but with the Jewish leaders—the council of
elders, the Sanhedrin, along with the Jerusalem scribes and
priests—who had rejected God's Messiah. Mark says that these
leaders now have rejected Mark and his fellow believers, calling
them either insane or possessed by demons, the same charges
that they directed against Jesus himself.
Mark takes a conciliatory attitude toward the Romans,
although it was known that the Roman governor, Pontius Pilate,
had sentenced Jesus to death. Nevertheless, the two trial scenes
included in this gospel effectively indict the Jewish leaders for
Jesus’ death, while somewhat exonerating the Romans. Mark
virtually invents a new Pilate—a well-meaning weakling
solicitous of justice but, as Mark depicts him, intimidated by the
chief priests within his own council chamber and by crowds
shouting outside, so that he executes a man he suspects may be
innocent.
Other first-century writers, Jewish and Roman, describe a
very different man. Even Josephus, despite his Roman
sympathies, says that the governor displayed contempt for his
Jewish subjects, illegally appropriated funds from the Temple
treasury, and brutally suppressed unruly crowds.18 Another
contemporary observer, Philo, a respected and influential
member of the Alexandrian Jewish community, describes Pilate
as a man of “ruthless, stubborn and cruel disposition,” famous
for, among other things, ordering “frequent executions without
trial.”19
Mark’s motives with regard to Pilate are not simple. Insofar as
he addresses his narrative to outsiders, Mark is eager to allay
Roman suspicions by showing that Jesus’ followers are no threat
to Roman order, any more than Jesus himself had been. Mark
may also have wanted to convert Gentile readers. Yet Mark is pri-
THE GOSPEL OF MARK AND THE JEWISH WAR / 11
marily interested in conflicts
within
the Jewish community—
especially conflicts between his own group and those who reject
its claims about Jesus.
Despite the hostility and suspicion he and his movement
aroused among both Jews and Gentiles, including, of course, the
Romans, Mark wrote to proclaim the “good news of Jesus of
Nazareth, Messiah of Israel” (1:1). Yet Mark knows that to
justify such claims about Jesus, he has to answer obvious
objections. If Jesus had been sent as God’s anointed king, how
could the movement he initiated have failed so miserably? How
could his followers have abandoned him and gone into hiding,
while soldiers captured him like a common criminal? Why did
virtually all his own people reject the claims about him—not
only the townspeople in Galilee but also the crowds he attracted
on his travels throughout Judea and in Jerusalem? And wasn’t
Jesus, after all, a seditionist himself, tainted in retrospect by
association with the failed war, having been arrested and
crucified as a rebel? Attempting to answer these questions, Mark
places the events surrounding Jesus within the context not
simply of the struggle against Rome but of the struggle between
good and evil in the universe. The stark events of Jesus’ life and
death cannot be understood, he suggests, apart from the clash of