R
rakovskii
Guest
I asked this question in a long form here: Why did God inflict the Babylonian captivity on the Jews? Was that fair or too severe?, and people asked me to condense it into one post.
The early apologist Minucius Felix responded to the argument that worshiping God didn’t help the Jews because they experienced catastrophe. He wrote:
I can think of seven potential reasons for the Captivity:
The early apologist Minucius Felix responded to the argument that worshiping God didn’t help the Jews because they experienced catastrophe. He wrote:
My question is: What exactly was the Jews’ violation for which God imposed the Babylonian Captivity, and was it too severe?For they themselves also, as long as they worshipped our God-and He is the same God of all-with chastity, innocency, and religion, as long as they obeyed His wholesome precepts, from a few became innumerable, from poor became rich, from being servants became kings; a few overwhelmed many; unarmed men overwhelmed armed ones as they fled from them, following them up by God’s command, and with the elements striving on their behalf.
Carefully read over their Scriptures, or if you are better pleased with the Roman writings, inquire concerning the Jews in the books (to say nothing of ancient documents) of Flavius Josephus or Antoninus Julianus, and you shall know that by their wickedness they deserved this fortune, and that nothing happened which had not before been predicted to them, if they should persevere in their obstinacy. Therefore you will understand that they forsook before they were forsaken, and that they were not, as you impiously say, taken captive with their God, but they were given up by God as deserters from His discipline.
I can think of seven potential reasons for the Captivity:
- Jeremiah implied in Jer. 25:4-6 that the Kingdom of Judah’s people had been following an evil way and worshiping other gods. But AFAIK, Jerusalem’s Temple only worshiped Jehovah between Hezekiah’s time and the Captivity. What was their evil?
- I remember a theory that the Jews failed to keep the Torah’s 7-year “Shmita” sowing cycle, and that this was why Jer. 25:11 said that the Babylonian conquest was for 70 years. But I lost where I read this theory, and I don’t know if the Bible says that the Jews failed to observe it.
- In Isaiah, King Hezekiah showed Babylonian emissaries his treasures, and Isaiah was indignant and predicted that the Babylonians would invade and take away the treasures. But I don’t know what was wrong with Hezekiah showing his treasures.
- Wikipedia notes that Jeremiah warned Judah’s king not to rebel against Babylon in alliance with Egypt, and Judah’s king didn’t heed Jeremiah. Josephus discusses this in Antiquities, Book X, Chp 6. But while fighting Babylon might have been strategically foolish, but was this such a moral mistake that it was God’s reason for the Temple’s destruction?
- Hezekiah’s son and successor, Manasseh, was impious. But didn’t the piety of Manasseh’s successor, Josiah, return the leadership to the right course?
- Josiah’s successor Jehoahaz was impious, but Josephus doesn’t go into details.
- Egypt captured Jehoahaz and replaced him with the impious ruler Jehoiakim. But since the Egyptians put Jehoiakim on the throne (eg. as a puppet), can we hold the Israelites responsible for his impiety?
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