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HISTORY OF HEROD
When the wise men asked
Herod the King "Where is he who is born king of the Jews?"
their question was not really spoken in a vacuum, for even the Roman
author Suetonius wrote, "There had spread all over the East an
old and established belief that it was fated for men coming from
Judea at that time to rule the world". But as wise as they were,
their inquiry before the King showed no great tact. For instead of
understanding the question to mean "Where is he who will someday
succeed you", Herod's suspicious mind warped the query into
"Where is the REAL king, you impostor?" At the time Herod
mistrusted everyone and thought himself surrounded by young aspirants
all plotting to seize his throne.
Rather than clap the Magi in
irons for asking such a question, his native shrewdness tried to
ferret out whatever information he could from them in order to kill
off a possible rival. From the information he had gained about the
date of the appearance of the star, and from the Old Testament
prophesies his own scholars knew of, Herod concluded that the "king
of the Jews" was about 2 years old and living in Bethlehem.
By the way, since Herod died in 4 B.C., and Jesus was around 2, we
might surmise that Jesus was born between 6-4 B.C. Furthermore, the
wise men did not visit Jesus in the manger, contrary to the Hallmark
Christmas cards, but some time later, perhaps 2 years later, when he
was living in a house (Matthew 2:11).
The young Herod had been
an exceptionally able ruler, governing Palestine as client-king in
behalf of the Roman emperor Augustus. The House of Herod had the
uncanny knack of being able to sniff the airs of Mediterranean
politics and make the right choices. Herod's father had given crucial
help to Julius Caesar when he was down in Egypt, cut off from his
supplies, and Caesar rewarded him handsomely for that. Herod himself
shrewdly advised his friend Mark Antony to drop Cleopatra and make
peace with Rome (advice he should have followed). And once Augustus
emerged victorious from the civil wars, he was so impressed with
young Herod that he allowed him to become one of his most trusted
friends.
Herod beautified Palestine during his 33 year reign.
He erected palaces, fortresses (Masada, for example), temples,
aqueducts, cities, and – his crowning achievement - the great
new Temple in Jerusalem. He created the magnificent port of Caesarea
in honor of Augustus and stimulated trade and commerce. He also
patronized culture in cities far from Palestine and easily became the
talk of the eastern Mediterranean. He even sponsored the Olympic
games of 12 B.C.!
But he had little support in his own
kingdom. As a half-Jew he seemed far too Romanizing for his subjects,
whom he taxed heavily. Soon he was hated as a tyrant, even by his own
family. Herod was so jealous of his favorite wife (he married ten
wives) that on two occasions he ordered that she be killed if he
failed to return from a critical mission. He finally killed her
anyway, as well as her grandfather, her mother, his brother-in-law,
and three of his sons, not to mention numerous subjects. In his
advancing paranoia, he was continually writing to Rome for permission
to execute one or two of his sons for treason. Finally even his
patron and friend Augustus had to admit, "I'd rather be Herod's
pig than his son". It was not only a play on the similar
sounding Greek words for son and pig, but a wry reference to the fact
that pork, at least, was not consumed by Jews.
Old and very
ill from arteriosclerosis, Herod worried that no one would mourn his
death - a justified concern. So he issued orders from his deathbed
that leaders from all parts of Judea were to be locked inside the
great hippodrome at Jericho. When Herod died, archers were to
massacre these thousands in cold blood, so there would indeed be
universal mourning associated with his death. Although the leaders
were gathered, the order was never given. Not only did this plan
fail, but so did his plan to kill "he who has been born king of
the Jews".