charles brough
Muse
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2008
- Messages
- 555
thanks for the details of Pilatus' rule and problems. . . very interesting.Well, while it's a possibility, and the jews certainly were gradually getting unruly, I find that possibility somewhat improbable. And here's my reasoning why.
Pilatus had the unenviable position of being a governor of a very unruly province, but of not actually having an army to keep them in check. As one of the equites, he didn't even have the right to command a legion. The nearest legion was that of the legate of Syria. Pilatus seems to have had just a couple of locally-recruited auxilia cohorts as police, and that was it.
(Especially bear in mind the "locally recruited" part . Not necessarily soldiers you'd want to trust with your life, if the locals revolted.)
Worse yet, for the first six years of his office, the office of legate of Syria was vacant. So Pilatus basically was on his own, in case of a rebellion.
What I'm getting at is that several times he had to bend over backwards to please the locals and prevent a rebellion.
E.g., almost as soon as he got there, he ran into the first problem. He couldn't use the emperor's busts with his cohorts (by then one of the standard symbols of any roman army, to remind them who they serve), because the local were rabid iconoclasts and threatened with open rebellion if he showed the emperor's bust anywhere.
We have three surviving reports about that screw-up.
Next, Pilatus put up gilded shields, dedicated to Tiberius, the current emperor at the time. This time he refrained from actually showing the emperor's picture on them, or any symbolism, save for a small inscription dedicating them to the emperor. He gets another almost rebellion, and the Jewish leaders even wrote to Tiberius personally about it. Tiberius ordered Pilatus to take them down.
Etc.
The point is that we _know_ of a bunch of such incidents. Both from Pilatus, who never made a secret of the troubles he has as a governor without an army, and from other sources.
Some group actually taking up arms in Jerusalem? I believe that ought to heve been documented too, if that happened.
Now of course, we don't have complete records, so it's possible for it to have slipped through the cracks. But it's somewhat strange that more minor clashes were recorded, but an actual armed attack in the middle of Jerusalem would be forgotten.
The Scriptures do not write of an armed clash. Jesus's cohorts did have arms, but the picture is that Jesus tore down the money-changer's stands.
He was supposedly arrested by "centurions" which may have been the local police and ordered not by Pilatus but by the local Jewish leadership that wanted him taken to Pilatus. The Scriptures mention one of His cohorts slicing an ear of the "police" who had come to arrest them. The indication of being armed itself supports the Schoernfeld-hypothesis.