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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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154 BEFORE JERUSALEM FELL<br />

view first. Then we will comment upon both the objections to the<br />

above proposed view and the deficiencies of the opposing views.<br />

It is true that the Roman empire was officially established as an<br />

empire under Augustus, and that there are some scattered lists of the<br />

emperors that seem to begin the enumeration with Augustus. Nevertheless,<br />

it seems patent that the enumeration of the “kings” should<br />

most logically begin with Julius Caesar. As Stuart observed: “At<br />

most, only an occasional beginning of the count with Augustus can<br />

be shown, in classic authors. The almost universal usage is against<br />

it ~26<br />

For instance, as we consider TacitUs’s statements in Annals 1:127<br />

and Histmie~ 1:1,28 we discover that in regard to information relevant<br />

to our inquiry he really only states two things of consequence regarding<br />

Augustus as emperor. One is that Julius refused to be called<br />

“king,” while Augustus accepted such a designation. The other is<br />

that the empire was established on an uninterrupted foundation with<br />

Augustus (upon Julius’s death the empire was involved in a power<br />

struggle for twelve years). Here, then, we do not have a denial of<br />

Julius’s role as the first “king” of the empire at all. Neither do we<br />

have a denial of his role as the first ruler of what shortly would<br />

become the Roman Empire.<br />

The same is true of the statement of Aurelius Victor (4th century)<br />

in his Abbreviated History of t~ Camars. He, too, speaks of the uninterrupted<br />

state of rule in Rome. In his E@-tome (1:1) is another example<br />

of the idea of permanency, along with formal usage of the titles<br />

Imperator and Augustw. Nothing he writes precludes the understanding<br />

that Julius was the first of the Roman Emperors. Other such<br />

references are much later than even Victor, and are thus too far<br />

beyond the era in which John wrote to be of much value. The<br />

determination should be based upon relatively contemporaneous<br />

authorities current in his day.<br />

As a matter of historical fact, we must note that Julius did claim<br />

26. Stuart, A@ca@e 2:276.<br />

27. Annals 1:1 states: “Neither Cinna nor Sulla created a lasting despotism: Pompey<br />

and Crassus quickly forfeited their power to Caesar, and Lepidus and An tony their<br />

swords to Augustus, who, under the style of ‘Prince,’ gathered beneath his empire a world<br />

outworn by civil broils.”<br />

28. Histories 1:1 notes: “After the battle of Actium, when the intereats of peace required<br />

that all power should be concentrated in the hands of one man. . . .“

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