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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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274 BEFORE JERUSALEM FELL<br />

Who is the heavenly saviour whose coming the peoples have awaited?<br />

The emperor!<br />

The offkial expression of this political philosophy is the classical coin.<br />

On the obverse of the coin we see the portrait of the ruler, decorated<br />

with the marks and emblems of deity, and fi-amed in titles of divine<br />

dignity. For the ruler is the god who had become man. The reverse<br />

of the coin usually depicts the most symbolically potent event in the<br />

life of the ruler, his aduent. . . . [I]t was in the age of the emperors<br />

that the political advent philosophy reached its heyday. The first to<br />

have the word ADVENTUS inscribed on the coins was Nero. A<br />

Corinthian coin of Nero’s reign, from the year 67, has on the obverse<br />

the type of the emperor in divine nakedness, adorned only with the<br />

laurel wreath of Apollo, and on the reverse the flagship with the<br />

imperial standard and above it the inscription ADVENTUS<br />

AUGUSTI, the Arrival of the August One. The divine Apollo once<br />

came by sea to the Greek mainland. The Roman emperor now makes<br />

his entry into Greece by sea, in order that he may be worshiped as<br />

Apollo incarnate.73<br />

Thus, of Paul’s first Roman imprisonment, it can be noted that:<br />

History has few stranger contrasts than when it shows us Paul preaching<br />

Christ under the walls of Nero’s palace. Thenceforward, there<br />

were but two religions in the Roman world: the worship of the<br />

Emperor and the worship of the Saviour. The old superstitions had<br />

been long worn out; they had lost all hold on educated minds. There<br />

remained to civilised heathen no other worship possible but the<br />

worship of poweq and the incarnation of power which they chose<br />

was, very naturally, the Sovereign of the world. This, then, was the<br />

ultimate result of the noble intuitions of Plato, the methodical reasonings<br />

of Aristotle, the pure morality of Socrates. All had ftiled, for<br />

want of external sanction and authority. The residuum they left was<br />

the philosophy of Epicurus, and the religion of Nerolatsy. But a new<br />

doctrine was already taught in the Forum, and believed even on the<br />

Palatine. Over against the altars of Nero and Pcsppaea, the voice of a<br />

prisoner was daily heard, and daily woke in groveling souls the<br />

consciousness of their divine destiny.y4<br />

In A.D. 67 Nero went to Greece where he remained for more<br />

73. Stauffer, Christ and th Caesars, p. 38.<br />

74. W. J. Coneybeare and J. S. Howson, l% Lz~e and Epistles of St. Paul, vol. 2 (New<br />

York: Scribners, 1894), pp. 434-435.

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