<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P122"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapXXII"></SPAN>XXII<br/> PRIESTS AND PROPHETS IN JUDEA</h2>
<p>The fall of Assyria and Babylon were only the first of a series of disasters
that were to happen to the Semitic peoples. In the seventh century
<small>B.C.</small> it would have seemed as though the whole civilized world
was to be dominated by Semitic rulers. They ruled the great Assyrian empire and
they had conquered Egypt; Assyria, Babylon, Syria were all Semitic, speaking
languages that were mutually intelligible. The trade of the world was in
Semitic hands. Tyre, Sidon, the great mother cities of the Phœnician coast, had
thrown out colonies that grew at last to even greater proportion in Spain,
Sicily and Africa. Carthage, founded before 800 <small>B.C.</small>, had risen
to a population of more than a million. It was for a time the greatest city on
earth. Its ships went to Britain and out into the Atlantic. They may have
reached Madeira. We have already noted how Hiram co-operated with Solomon to
build ships on the Red Sea for the Arabian and perhaps for the Indian trade. In
the time of the Pharaoh Necho, a Phœnician expedition sailed completely round
Africa.</p>
<p>At that time the Aryan peoples were still barbarians. Only
the Greeks were reconstructing a new civilization of the
ruins of the one they had destroyed, and the Medes were
becoming “formidable,” as an Assyrian inscription
calls them, in central Asia. In 800
<small>B.C.</small> no one could have prophesied that before the
third century <small>B.C.</small> every trace of
Semitic dominion would be wiped out by Aryan-speaking
conquerors, and that everywhere the Semitic peoples would be
subjects or tributaries or scattered altogether. Everywhere
except in the northern deserts of Arabia, where the Bedouin
adhered steadily to the nomadic way of life, the ancient way
of life of the Semites before Sargon I and his Akkadians went
down to conquer Sumeria. But the Arab Bedouin were never
conquered by Aryan masters.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P123"></SPAN></span>Now of
all these civilized Semites who were beaten and overrun in
these five eventful centuries one people only held together
and clung to its ancient traditions and that was this little
people, the Jews, who were sent back to build their city of
Jerusalem by Cyrus the Persian. And they were able to do
this, because they had got together this literature of
theirs, their Bible, in Babylon. It is not so much the Jews
who made the Bible as the Bible which made the Jews. Running
through this Bible were certain ideas, different from the
ideas of the people about them, very stimulating and
sustaining ideas, to which they were destined to cling
through five and twenty centuries of hardship, adventure and
oppression.</p>
<p>Foremost of these Jewish ideas was this, that their God was
invisible and remote, an invisible God in a temple not made
with hands, a Lord of Righteousness throughout the earth.
All other peoples had national gods embodied in images that
lived in temples. If the image was smashed and the temple
razed, presently that god died out. But this was a new idea,
this God of the Jews, in the heavens, high above priests and
sacrifices. And this God of Abraham, the Jews believed, had
chosen them to be his peculiar people, to restore Jerusalem
and make it the capital of Righteousness in the World. They
were a people exalted by their sense of a common destiny.
This belief saturated them all when they returned to
Jerusalem after the captivity in Babylon.</p>
<p>Is it any miracle that in their days of overthrow and
subjugation many Babylonians and Syrians and so forth and
later on many Phœnicians, speaking practically the same
language and having endless customs, habits, tastes and
traditions in common, should be attracted by this inspiring
cult and should seek to share in its fellowship and its
promise? After the fall of Tyre, Sidon, Carthage and the
Spanish Phœnician cities, the Phœnicians suddenly
vanish from history; and as suddenly we find, not simply in
Jerusalem but in Spain, Africa, Egypt, Arabia, the East,
wherever the Phœnicians had set their feet, communities
of Jews. And they were all held together by the Bible and by
the reading of the Bible. Jerusalem was from the first only
their nominal capital; their real city was this book of
books. This is a new sort of thing in history. It is
something of which the seeds were sown long before, when the
Sumerians <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P124"></SPAN></span>and Egyptians began to turn their
hieroglyphics into writing. The Jews were a new thing, a
people without a king and presently without a temple (for as
we shall tell Jerusalem itself was broken up in 70
<small>A.D.</small>), held together and consolidated out of
heterogeneous elements by nothing but the power of the
written word.</p>
<p>And this mental welding of the Jews was neither planned nor
foreseen nor done by either priests or statesmen. Not only a
new kind of community but a new kind of man comes into
history with the development of the Jews. In the days of
Solomon the Hebrews looked like becoming a little people just
like any other little people of that time clustering around
court and temple, ruled by the wisdom of the priest and led
by the ambition of the king. But already, the reader may
learn from the Bible, this new sort of man of which we speak,
the Prophet, was in evidence.</p>
<p>As troubles thicken round the divided Hebrews the importance
of these Prophets increases.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-124"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-124.jpg" alt="THE BLACK OBELISK OF SHALMANESER II" width-obs="600" height-obs="305" /> <p class="caption">
THE BLACK OBELISK OF SHALMANESER II
<br/>
<small>This obelisk (in the British Museum) of the King of Assyria
mentions, in cuneiform, “Jehu the son of Omri.” Panel
showing Jewish captives bringing tribute
</small></p>
</div>
<p>What were these Prophets? They were men of the most diverse
origins. The Prophet Ezekiel was of the priestly caste and
the Prophet Amos wore the goatskin mantle of a shepherd, but
all had this in common, that they gave allegiance to no one
but to the God of Righteousness and that they spoke directly
to the people. They <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P125"></SPAN></span>came without licence or
consecration. “Now the word of the Lord came unto
me;” that was the formula. They were intensely
political. They exhorted the people against Egypt,
“that broken reed,” or against Assyria or
Babylon; they denounced the indolence of the priestly order
or the flagrant sins of the King. Some of them turned their
attention to what we should now call “social
reform.” The rich were “grinding the faces of
the poor,” the luxurious were consuming the
children’s bread; wealthy people made friends with and
imitated the splendours and vices of foreigners; and this was
hateful to Jehovah, the God of Abraham, who would certainly
punish this land.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-125"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-125.jpg" alt="ANOTHER PANEL OF THE BLACK OBELISK" width-obs="600" height-obs="260" /> <p class="caption">
ANOTHER PANEL OF THE BLACK OBELISK
<br/>
<small>Captive Princes making obeisance to Shalmaneser II
</small></p>
</div>
<p>These fulminations were written down and preserved and
studied. They went wherever the Jews went, and wherever they
went they spread a new religious spirit. They carried the
common man past priest and temple, past court and king and
brought him face to face with the Rule of Righteousness.
That is their supreme importance in the history of mankind.
In the great utterances of Isaiah the prophetic voice rises
to a pitch of splendid anticipation and foreshadows the whole
earth united and at peace under one God. Therein the Jewish
prophecies culminate.</p>
<p>All the Prophets did not speak in this fashion, and the
intelligent reader of the prophetic books will find much hate
in them, much prejudice, and much that will remind him of the
propaganda pamphlets <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P126"></SPAN></span>of the present time. Nevertheless
it is the Hebrew Prophets of the period round and about the
Babylonian captivity who mark the appearance of a new power
in the world, the power of individual moral appeal, of an
appeal to the free conscience of mankind against the fetish
sacrifices and slavish loyalties that had hitherto bridled
and harnessed our race.</p>
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