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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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The Role of Emperor Worship 273<br />

of Augustus. “67 Indeed, of the imperial development of the emperor<br />

cult it should be noted that “Caligula and Nero, however, abandoned<br />

all reserve. Caligula was pictured on coins with the halo of the sun<br />

god Helios, and Nero was represented as Apollo.”G8 The archaeological<br />

record evidences that “the emperors, around whose heads, from<br />

the days of Nero onwards, had gilded darting rays in token of their<br />

divine solar ancestry.”6g Nero clearly “demanded divine honors while<br />

. . . still alive. ” 70<br />

In A.D. 66 Tiridates, King of Armenia, approached Nero in<br />

devout and reverential worship, as recorded by Dio Cassius:<br />

Indeed, the proceedings of the conference were not limited to mere<br />

conversations, but a lofty platiorm had been erected on which were<br />

set images of Nero, and in the presence of the Armenians, Parthians,<br />

and Romans Tlridates approached and paid them reverence; then,<br />

after sacrificing to them and calling them by laudatory names, he took<br />

off the diadem from his head and set it upon them. . . .<br />

. . . .<br />

Tiridates publicly fell before Nero seated upon the rostra in the<br />

Forum: “Master, I am the descendant of Arsaces, brother of the kings<br />

Vologaesus and Pacorus, and thy slave. And I have come to thee,<br />

my god, to worship thee as I do Mithras. The destiny thou spinnest<br />

for me shall be mine; for thou art my Fortune and my Fate.”71<br />

Dio notes also the fate of one senator who did not appreciate Nero’s<br />

“divine” musical abilities: “Thrasaea was executed because he failed<br />

to appear regularly in the senate, . . . and because he never would<br />

listen to the emperor’s singing and lyre-playing, nor sacrifice to<br />

Nero’s Divine Voice as did the rest.’”z<br />

Stauffer points out the beginning of a new theology of the emperor<br />

cult that was born under Nero:<br />

67. Scullard, Gnrcchi to Nero, p. 371. See also Henderson Five Roman Emperors, p. 29.<br />

68. Eduard Lohse, The New ‘l%tarrwrst Environmd, trans. John E. Steely (Nashville:<br />

Abingdon, 1976), p. 220. See also Paul Johnson, A History of Christiant~ (New York<br />

Atheneum, 1979), pp. 6ff.<br />

69. Workman, Persecution, p. M. See also Cambridge Anah.t HistQv 10493.<br />

70. Joseph Ward Swain, The Har@r History of Civilization, vol. 1 (New York: Harper,<br />

1958), p. 229.<br />

71. Roman History 62:5:2.<br />

72. Roman History 62:26:3.

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