|
The Hebrews were pleased with
what was said, and they gave their approbation to him whom God had ordained;
for Aaron was of them all the most deserving of this honor, on account of his
own stock and gift of prophecy, and his brother's virtue. He had at that time
four sons, Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar.
2. Now Moses commanded
them to make use of all the utensils which were more than were necessary to the
structure of the tabernacle, for covering the tabernacle itself, the
candlestick, and altar of incense, and the other vessels, that they might not
be at all hurt when they journeyed, either by the rain, or by the rising of the
dust. And when he had gathered the multitude together again, he ordained that
they should offer half a shekel for every man, as an oblation to God; which
shekel is a piece among the Hebrews, and is equal to four Athenian drachmae.
(18) Whereupon they readily obeyed
what Moses had commanded; and the number of the offerers was six hundred and
five thousand five hundred and fifty. Now this money that was brought by the
men that were free, was given by such as were about twenty years old, but under
fifty; and what was collected was spent in the uses of the tabernacle.
3. Moses now purified
the tabernacle and the priests; which purification was performed after the
following manner: - He commanded them to take five hundred shekels of choice
myrrh, an equal quantity of cassia, and half the foregoing weight of cinnamon
and calamus (this last is a sort of sweet spice); to beat them small, and wet
them with an bin of oil of olives (an hin is our own country measure,
and contains two Athenian choas, or congiuses); then mix them
together, and boil them, and prepare them after the art of the apothecary, and
make them into a very sweet ointment; and afterward to take it to anoint and to
purify the priests themselves, and all the tabernacle, as also the sacrifices.
There were also many, and
those of various kinds, of sweet spices, that belonged to the tabernacle, and
such as were of very great price, and were brought to the golden altar of
incense; the nature of which I do not now describe, lest it should be
troublesome to my readers; but incense (19) was to be offered twice a-day, both before sun-rising
and at sun-setting. They were also to keep oil already purified for the lamps;
three of which were to give light all day long, (20) upon the sacred candlestick, before God, and the rest
were to be lighted at the evening.
4. Now all was
finished. Besaleel and Aholiab appeared to be the most skillful of the workmen;
for they invented finer works than what others had done before them, and were
of great abilities to gain notions of what they were formerly ignorant of; and
of these, Besaleel was judged to be the best. Now the whole time they were
about this work was the interval of seven months; and after this it was that
was ended the first year since their departure out of Egypt. But at the
beginning of the second year, on the month Xanthicus, as the Macedonians
call it, but on the month Nisan, as the Hebrews call it, on the new
moon, they consecrated the tabernacle, and all its vessels, which I have
already described.
5. Now God showed
himself pleased with the work of the Hebrews, and did not permit their labors
to be in vain; nor did he disdain to make use of what they had made, but he
came and sojourned with them, and pitched his tabernacle in the holy house. And
in the following manner did he come to it: - The sky was clear, but there was a
mist over the tabernacle only, encompassing it, but not with such a very deep
and thick cloud as is seen in the winter season, nor yet in so thin a one as
men might be able to discern any thing through it, but from it there dropped a
sweet dew, and such a one as showed the presence of God to those that desired
and believed it.
6. Now when Moses had
bestowed such honorary presents on the workmen, as it was fit they should
receive, who had wrought so well, he offered sacrifices in the open court of
the tabernacle, as God commanded him; a bull, a ram, and a kid of the goats,
for a sin-offering. Now I shall speak of what we do in our sacred offices in my
discourse about sacrifices; and therein shall inform men in what cases Moses
bid us offer a whole burnt-offering, and in what cases the law permits us to
partake of them as of food. And when Moses had sprinkled Aaron's vestments,
himself, and his sons, with the blood of the beasts that were slain, and had
purified them with spring waters and ointment, they became God's priests.
After this manner did he
consecrate them and their garments for seven days together. The same he did to
the tabernacle, and the vessels thereto belonging, both with oil first
incensed, as I said, and with the blood of bulls and of rams, slain day by day
one, according to its kind. But on the eighth day he appointed a feast for the
people, and commanded them to offer sacrifice according to their ability.
Accordingly they contended one with another, and were ambitious to exceed each
other in the sacrifices which they brought, and so fulfilled Moses's
injunctions. But as the sacrifices lay upon the altar, a sudden fire was
kindled from among them of its own accord, and appeared to the sight like fire
from a flash of lightning, and consumed whatsoever was upon the altar.
7. Hereupon an
affliction befell Aaron, considered as a man and a father, but was undergone by
him with true fortitude; for he had indeed a firmness of soul in such
accidents, and he thought this calamity came upon him according to God's will:
for whereas he had four sons, as I said before, the two elder of them, Nadab
and Abihu, did not bring those sacrifices which Moses bade them bring, but
which they used to offer formerly, and were burnt to death. Now when the fire
rushed upon them, and began to burn them, nobody could quench it.
Accordingly they died in this
manner. And Moses bid their father and their brethren to take up their bodies,
to carry them out of the camp, and to bury them magnificently. Now the
multitude lamented them, and were deeply affected at this their death, which so
unexpectedly befell them. But Moses entreated their brethren and their father
not to be troubled for them, and to prefer the honor of God before their grief
about them; for Aaron had already put on his sacred garments.
8. But Moses refused
all that honor which he saw the multitude ready to bestow upon him, and
attended to nothing else but the service of God. He went no more up to Mount
Sinai; but he went into the tabernacle, and brought back answers from God for
what he prayed for. His habit was also that of a private man, and in all other
circumstances he behaved himself like one of the common people, and was
desirous to appear without distinguishing himself from the multitude, but would
have it known that he did nothing else but take care of them. He also set down
in writing the form of their government, and those laws by obedience whereto
they would lead their lives so as to please God, and so as to have no quarrels
one among another. However, the laws he ordained were such as God suggested to
him; so I shall now discourse concerning that form of government, and those
laws.
9. I will now treat of
what I before omitted, the garment of the high priest: for he [Moses] left no
room for the evil practices of [false] prophets; but if some of that sort
should attempt to abuse the Divine authority, he left it to God to be present
at his sacrifices when he pleased, and when he pleased to be absent.
(21) And he was willing this should be
known, not to the Hebrews only, but to those foreigners also who were there.
For as to those stones, (22) which we
told you before, the high priest bare on his shoulders, which were sardonyxes,
(and I think it needless to describe their nature, they being known to every
body,) the one of them shined out when God was present at their sacrifices; I
mean that which was in the nature of a button on his right shoulder, bright
rays darting out thence, and being seen even by those that were most remote;
which splendor yet was not before natural to the stone.
This has appeared a wonderful
thing to such as have not so far indulged themselves in philosophy, as to
despise Divine revelation. Yet will I mention what is still more wonderful than
this: for God declared beforehand, by those twelve stones which the high priest
bare on his breast, and which were inserted into his breastplate, when they
should be victorious in battle; for so great a splendor shone forth from them
before the army began to march, that all the people were sensible of God's
being present for their assistance. Whence it came to pass that those Greeks,
who had a veneration for our laws, because they could not possibly contradict
this, called that breastplate the Oracle. Now this breastplate, and this
sardonyx, left off shining two hundred years before I composed this book, God
having been displeased at the transgressions of his laws. Of which things we
shall further discourse on a fitter opportunity; but I will now go on with my
proposed narration.
10. The tabernacle
being now consecrated, and a regular order being settled for the priests, the
multitude judged that God now dwelt among them, and betook themselves to
sacrifices and praises to God as being now delivered from all expectation of
evils and as entertaining a hopeful prospect of better times hereafter. They
offered also gifts to God some as common to the whole nation, and others as
peculiar to themselves, and these tribe by tribe; for the heads of the tribes
combined together, two by two, and brought a wagon and a yoke of oxen. These
amounted to six, and they carried the tabernacle when they journeyed. Besides
which, each head of a tribe brought a bowl, and a charger, and a spoon, of ten
darics, full of incense. Now the charger and the bowl were of silver, and
together they weighed two hundred shekels, but the bowl cost no more than
seventy shekels; and these were full of fine flour mingled with oil, such as
they used on the altar about the sacrifices.
They brought also a young
bullock, and a ram, with a lamb of a year old, for a whole burnt-offering, as
also a goat for the forgiveness of sins. Every one of the heads of the tribes
brought also other sacrifices, called peace-offerings, for every day two
bulls, and five rams, with lambs of a year old, and kids of the goats. These
heads of tribes were twelve days in sacrificing, one sacrificing every day. Now
Moses went no longer up to Mount Sinai, but went into the tabernacle, and
learned of God what they were to do, and what laws should be made; which laws
were preferable to what have been devised by human understanding, and proved to
be firmly observed for all time to come, as being believed to be the gift of
God, insomuch that the Hebrews did not transgress any of those laws, either as
tempted in times of peace by luxury, or in times of war by distress of affairs.
But I say no more here concerning them, because I have resolved to compose
another work concerning our laws.
Footnotes
(17) It is well worth our observation, that the two principal
qualifications required in this section for the constitution of the first high
priest, (viz. that he should have an excellent character for virtuous and good
actions; as also that he should have the approbation of the people,) are here
noted by Josephus, even where the nomination belonged to God himself; which are
the very same qualifications which the Christian religion requires in the
choice of Christian bishops, priests, and deacons; as the Apostolical
Constitutions inform us, B. II. Ch. 3.
(18) This weight and value of the Jewish shekel, in the days
of Josephus, equal to about 2s. 10d, sterling is, by the learned Jews, owned to
be one-fifth larger than were their old shekels; which determination agrees
perfectly with the remaining shekels that have Samaritan inscriptions, coined
generally by Simon the Maccabee, about 230 years before Josephus published his
Antiquities, which never weigh more than 2s. 4d, and commonly but 2s. 4d. See
Reland De Nummis Samaritanorum, p. 138.
(19) The incense was here offered, according to Josephus's
opinion, before sun-rising, and at sun-setting; but in the days of Pompey,
according to the same Josephus, the sacrifices were offered in the morning, and
at the ninth hour. Antiq. B. XIV. Ch. 4. Sect. 3.
(20) Hence we may correct the opinions of the modern Rabbins,
who say that only one of the seven lamps burned in the day-time; whereas our
Josephus, an eyewitness, says there were three.
(21) Of this strange expression, that Moses
"left it to God to be
present at his sacrifices when he pleased, and when he pleased to be absent,"
see the note on B. II.
Against Apion, Sect. 16.
(22) These answers by the oracle of Urim and Thummim, which
words signify, light and perfection, or, as the Septuagint render them,
revelation and truth, and denote nothing further, that I see, but the shining
stones themselves, which were used, in this method of illumination, in
revealing the will of God, after a perfect and true manner, to his people
Israel: I say, these answers were not made by the shining of the precious
stones, after an awkward manner, in the high priest's breastplate, as the
modern Rabbins vainly suppose; for certainly the shining of the stones might
precede or accompany the oracle, without itself delivering that oracle, see
Antiq. B. VI. Ch. 6. Sect. 4; but rather by an
audible voice from the mercy-seat between the cherubims. See Prideaux's Connect
at the year 534.
This oracle had been silent,
as Josephus here informs us, two hundred years before he wrote his Antiquities,
or ever since the days of the last good high priest of the family of the
Maccabees, John Hyrcanus. Now it is here very well worth our observation, that
the oracle before us was that by which God appeared to he present with, and
gave directions to, his people Israel as their King, all the while they
submitted to him in that capacity; and did not set over them such independent
kings as governed according to their own wills and political maxims, instead of
Divine directions.
Accordingly we meet with this
oracle (besides angelic and prophetic admonitions) all along from the days of
Moses and Joshua to the anointing of Saul, the first of the succession of the
kings, Numbers 27:21; Joshua 6:6, etc.; 19:50; Judges 1:1; 18:4-6, 30, 31;
20:18, 23, 26-28; 21:1, etc.; 1 Samuel 1:17, 18; 3. per tot.; 4. per tot.; nay,
till Saul's rejection of the Divine commands in the war with Amalek, when he
took upon him to act as he thought fit, 1 Samuel 14:3, 18, 19, 36, 37, then
this oracle left Saul entirely, (which indeed he had seldom consulted before, 1
Samuel 14:35; 1 Chronicles 10:14; 13:3; Antiq. B. 7 Ch.
4 sect 2.) and accompanied David, who was anointed to succeed him, and who
consulted God by it frequently, and complied with its directions constantly (1
Samuel 14:37, 41; 15:26; 22:13, 15; 23:9, 10; 30:7, 8, 18; 2 Samuel 2:1; 5:19,
23; 21:1; 23 :14; 1 Chronicles 14:10, 14).
Saul, indeed, long after his
rejection by God, and when God had given him up to destruction for his
disobedience, did once afterwards endeavor to consult God when it was too late;
but God would not then answer him, neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by
prophets, 1 Samuel 28:6. Nor did any of David's successors, the kings of Judah,
that we know of, consult God by this oracle, till the very Babylonish captivity
itself, when those kings were at an end; they taking upon them, I suppose, too
much of despotic power and royalty, and too little owning the God of Israel for
the supreme King of Israel, though a few of them consulted the prophets
sometimes, and were answered by them. At the return of the two tribes, without
the return of the kingly government, the restoration of this oracle was
expected, Nehemiah 7:63; 1 Esd. 5:40; 1 Macc. 4:46; 14:41.
And indeed it may seem to have
been restored for some time after the Babylonish captivity, at least in the
days of that excellent high priest, John Hyrcanus, whom Josephus esteemed as a
king, a priest, and a prophet; and who, he says, foretold several things that
came to pass accordingly; but about the time of his death, he here implies,
that this oracle quite ceased, and not before.
The following high priests now
putting diadems on their heads, and ruling according to their own will, and by
their own authority, like the other kings of the pagan countries about them; so
that while the God of Israel was allowed to be the supreme King of Israel, and
his directions to be their authentic guides, God gave them such directions as
their supreme King and Governor, and they were properly under a theocracy, by
this oracle of Urim, but no longer (see Dr. Bernard's notes here); though I
confess I cannot but esteem the high priest Jaddus's divine dream,
Antiq. B. XI. Ch. 8. Sect. 4, and the high priest
Caiaphas's most remarkable prophecy, John 11:47-52, as two small remains or
specimens of this ancient oracle, which properly belonged to the Jewish high
priests: nor perhaps ought we entirely to forget that eminent prophetic dream
of our Josephus himself, (one next to a high priest, as of the family of the
Asamoneans or Maccabees,) as to the succession of Vespasian and Titus to the
Roman empire, and that in the days of Nero, and before either Galba, Otho, or
Vitellius were thought of to succeed him. Of the War, B. III. Ch. 8.
Sect. 9.
This, I think, may well be
looked on as the very last instance of any thing like the prophetic Urim among
the Jewish nation, and just preceded their fatal desolation: but how it could
possibly come to pass that such great men as Sir John Marsham and Dr. Spenser,
should imagine that this oracle of Urim and Thummim with other practices as old
or older than the law of Moses, should have been ordained in imitation of
somewhat like them among the Egyptians, which we never hear of till the days of
Diodorus Siculus, Aelian, and Maimonides, or little earlier than the Christian
era at the highest, is almost unaccountable; while the main business of the law
of Moses was evidently to preserve the Israelites from the idolatrous and
superstitious practices of the neighboring pagan nations; and while it is so
undeniable, that the evidence for the great antiquity of Moses's law is
incomparably beyond that for the like or greater antiquity of such customs in
Egypt or other nations, which indeed is generally none at all, it is most
absurd to derive any of Moses's laws from the imitation of those heathen
practices, Such hypotheses demonstrate to us how far inclination can prevail
over evidence, in even some of the most learned part of mankind.
 |