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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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The Role of Emperor Worship 283<br />

But another matter arises in consideration of these tiairs. The<br />

very fact that the cessation of Israel’s religious honor of the emperor<br />

(through daily sacrifice) determined Rome’s destructive response is<br />

indicative of the very seriousness with which the emperor conceived<br />

of emperor worship. In Rome’s eyes, emperor worship may well have<br />

been deemed a purely political and symbolic act, and not a truly<br />

religious act. ] 18 But it was a deadly serious symbolic statement, one<br />

of such magnitude as to eventuate in war. Even symbolic actions are<br />

of serious historical consequence among most peoples; surely even<br />

early emperor worship, even if merely symbolic, had serious political<br />

implications that could result in the persecution and war of Revelation.<br />

Returning to the motivation for Nero’s persecution of the Christians<br />

“there seem to have been two counts in the indictment. By<br />

ancient rules each was tried separately. The first count probably, as<br />

Conybeare and Howson suggest, was complicity in the fire. . . .<br />

The second count was either majesta – almost anything could be<br />

brought under this head – or the new crime of being a Christian, the<br />

ccime of ‘the Name’, in itself a mere variation, as we shall see later,<br />

of majestas or high treason. On this indictment there could be but one<br />

verdict “119 As Henderson explains of this terrible episode: “In fact><br />

Christianity and the State were inevitably hostile, just because neither<br />

could understand the position of the other. On the side of the<br />

State, a very great and a very justifiable value was attached to the<br />

conception of the Unity and the Unification of the whole Empire,<br />

which was expressed, and could be expressed only, in the idea and<br />

observance of Caesar-worship. This reverence paid to the Imperial<br />

idea as symbolised by the worship of Rome and Augustus ‘united’,<br />

as has been said, ‘the peoples of the Empire from the Ocean to the<br />

Syrian desert.’” ’ 20<br />

Thus, lurking behind the persecution, even if not<br />

in the forefront, is the cult of the emperor — a harbinger of things to<br />

come.<br />

Additional questions could be explored with profit: Could it be<br />

that the circus Nero sponsored to initiate the persecution of the<br />

Christians in A.D. 64 was part of the veneration of the emperor, who<br />

118. Except, of course, in the cases of the madcap emperors Caligula (Gaius) and<br />

Domitian, and surely that of the insane Nero.<br />

119. Workman, Persecutwn, p. 16.<br />

120. Henderson, Lij2 and Pnncipate, p. 353.

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