American Minute with Bill Federer
Jerusalem destroyed by Rome -then Rome devastated by Volcano, Fire, Plague
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"Let us go up at once, and possess the land; for we are well able to overcome it," shouted
Joshua
and
Caleb,
after they spent 40 days spying out the Promised Land.
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But the other ten spies gave
a bad report,
causing the Israelites to lose heart. This sad day was
Tisha B'Av
- the
9th day of the Hebrew month of Av.
As a result of their doubt, the
Israelites
wandered in the desert 40 years.
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Tisha B'Av
in the year 587 BC was the day the Babylonians destroyed
Solomon's Temple
in
Jerusalem,
and carried the Tribe of
Judah
into captivity.
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Tisha B'Av
in the year 70 AD was the day the
Romans
destroyed the
Second Temple
in
Jerusalem.
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Rome's
destruction of the
Jerusalem
began four years earlier, in 66 AD, when
Roman Emperor Nero
appointed
General Vespasian
to put down a revolt in
Judea.
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Soon after
Nero's
order,
Rome
experienced chaos with the year of four emperors.
Nero
committed suicide in 68 AD.
His successor,
Galba,
was assassinated within 8 months, in 69 AD.
His successor,
Otho,
committed suicide within 2 months.
His successor,
Vitellius,
was executed within 8 months.
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Vespasian
was the next
Emperor
and his son,
Titus,
continued the conquest of
Judea.
Titus
surrounded
Jerusalem
and starved inhabitants for months.
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Titus
ordered Jewish deserters from
Jerusalem
to be crucified around the walls.
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By the end of July, 70 AD, the Roman Army broke through the walls.
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The
Second Temple
was destroyed on
Tisha B'Av,
70 AD.
By September 8, 70 AD,
all of
Jerusalem
was
completely conquered.
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Historian
Josephus
recorded that over
a million Jews were killed
in the siege.
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According to historian
Eusebius, Romans
hunted down and killed all descendants of the
royal line of David.
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The
Jewish Temple
was so completely destroyed that only the foundation stones of the
Temple Mount
were left, which are the bottom rows of the
Wailing Wall.
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Jewish Temple treasures
were carried off to Rome, as shown on the
Arch of Titus,
and were used to finance the building of
Rome's Colosseum.
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The
Colosseum
was so named as it was next to
Nero's
100 foot high bronze
Colossus Statue
depicting the
Roman sun god Apollo,
modeled after the 100 foot high bronze
Colossus Statue of Rhodes
depicting the
Greek son god Helios.
France's gift of
The Statue of Liberty-the New Colossus
was modeled after it.
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After the destruction of
Jerusalem,
Emperor Vespasian
caught a slight illness in 79 AD which led to severe diarrhea and death. His last words were: "Oh dear! I think I'm becoming a god!"
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His son,
Titus,
became the next Emperor and
two months later Mount Vesuvius erupted.
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The volcanic eruption destroyed the
Bay of Naples,
including the cities of
Herculaneum
and the immoral resort city of
Pompeii.
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Thousands of
Romans
were
buried alive
under feet of
volcanic ash.
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Then, in the spring of 80 AD, the city of
Rome
caught fire.
Flames burned out of control for three days and nights
destroying much of Capitoline Hill,
the
Temple of Jupiter, Pantheon,
and
Pompey's Theater.
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Then followed the worst
outbreak of plague
that
Rome
had yet endured.
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In spite of all this,
Titus
insisted on dedicating the
Colosseum
to commemorate his victories in the
Jewish wars.
For 100 days, thousands were killed in executions and gladiatorial fights, in addition to 5,000 animals.
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Immediately following the games,
Titus
died, having been in office
just two years.
He is rumored to have been poisoned on orders of his brother,
Domitian,
who became the next emperor.
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In 135 AD, on the date
Tisha B'Av,
Roman Emperor
Hadrian
had another 500,000 Jews massacred at Betar during
Bar Kokhba's revolt.
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Emperor
Hadrian
believed the source of
Jewish rebellion
was their faith, so he
executed Jewish scholars, prohibited the Torah and the Hebrew calendar,
and
burned the sacred scroll on the Temple Mount.
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In his attempt to completely erase
Jewish history
from the land, Emperor
Hadrian
changed the name of
Judea
to
"Syria Palaestina."
This is the origin of the region being referred to as
"Palestine."
Hadrian
also changed the name of
Jerusalem
to
"Aelia Capitolina,"
and banned Jews from entering on pain of death.
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Eusebius
wrote in his
History of the Church
(ser. II, vol. I, book IV, chapter VI):
"The Last Siege of the Jews Under Hadrian
- The whole nation was prohibited from this time on by a decree, and by the commands of
Hadrian,
from ever going up to the country about
Jerusalem.
For the emperor gave orders that they should
not even see from a distance the land of their fathers.
Such is the account of Aristo of Pella.
And thus, when the city had been emptied of the Jewish nation and had suffered the total destruction of its ancient inhabitants, it was colonized by a different race, and the Roman city which subsequently arose
changed its name and was called Aelia,
in honor of the emperor Aelius Hadrian."
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Cassius Dio wrote in
Roman History
(69.12):
"At Jerusalem,
Hadrian
founded a city in place of the one which had been razed to the ground, naming it
Aelia Capitolina,
and
on the site of the temple of the god he raised a new temple to Jupiter.
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This brought on a war of no slight importance nor of brief duration, for the
Jews
deemed it intolerable that
foreign races should be settled in their city
and foreign religious rites planted there."
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Eusebius wrote in
Demonstratio Evangelica
(8.3; 405, circa 314 - 318 AD):
"Jerusalem
... is even now like
a quarry,
all the inhabitants of the city
choosing stones from its ruins
as they will for private as well as public buildings.
And it is sad for the eyes to see
stones from the Temple itself,
and from its ancient sanctuary and holy place,
used for the building of idol temples, and of theatres for the populace."
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Emperor
Hadrian's
reign saw the beginning of the
end of Roman expansion.
Shortly after
Hadrian
, the
Roman Empire
transitioned to maintaining its borders, then began contracting.
Hadrian's Wall
across the whole of
Britain
marked
the Empire's furthest extent,
except for the brief 20 year period of Antonine's Wall.
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Jews
were later allowed to enter
Jerusalem
once a year to
pray at the Western Wall
on
Tisha B'Av.
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Over the following centuries, the
Land of Israel
was invaded or occupied by:
135 AD Roman Empire
390 AD Byzantine Empire
614 AD Sassanid Persians
635 AD Umayyad Caliphate
750 AD Abbasid Caliphate
909 AD Fatimid Caliphate
1071 AD Seljuk Turks
1099 AD Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
1187 AD Ayyubid Sultanate
1260 AD Mongolian Empire
1291 AD Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt
1517 AD Ottoman Sultanate
1660 AD Druze Dynasty
1799 AD French Napoleon
1844 AD Tanzimat Ottoman Empire
1864 AD Ottoman Vilayet of Syria
1917 AD Britain Mandate.
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For centuries, people across the world desired to pilgrimage to
Jerusalem,
including
Mark Twain
and
Abraham Lincoln.
The Library of Congress has a scrapbook with an account by Rev. N.W. Miner of Springfield, who officiated Lincoln's burial, in which are recalled
President Lincoln's
last words while at Ford's Theater with his wife:
"Mrs. Lincoln
informed me that ... the very last moments of his conscious life were spent in conversation with her about his future plans ...
He said he wanted to
visit the Holy Land
and see those places hallowed by
the footprints of the Saviour.
He was saying there was no city he so much desired to see as
Jerusalem."
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In 1917,
Britain
issued the
Balfour Declaration
establishing the
Jewish homeland.
On May 14, 1948, the
State of Israel
came into being again.
In 1967,
Jerusalem
was once again under Jewish control.
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Israel
maintained its
independence
after the 1973
Yom Kippur War,
and
Jerusalem
was reaffirmed as
Israel's capital
with "The Basic Law: Jerusalem, the Capital of Israel," passed in 1980.
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The
United Nations
was created, in part,
to protect Jews
after the Nazi holocaust, and one of the first acts of the
U.N.
was to
recognize the State of Israel.
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Despite this, the
U.N. Security Council
threatened to divide Jerusalem
and take a
third of Israel
to create a
"Palestinian" State.
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The
Roman Empire
experienced a series of disasters after it forced
Jews
from their land.
Some consider it more than coincidental, the timing of certain disasters following attempts by the United States to force Jews to give up their land.
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On October 30, 1991,
President George H.W. Bush
signed the
Oslo Accord
pressuring Israel to give
"land for peace."
The next day,
"The Perfect Storm"
hit New England causing damages over $100 million, including 30 foot waves
demolishing the home of President George H.W. Bush
at
Kennebunkport, Maine.
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On August 23, 1992,
President George H.W. Bush
pressured Israel with the Madrid
"land for peace"
agreement.
The same day,
Hurricane Andrew
smashed into Florida causing $30 billion in damages, destroying over 180,000 homes.
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On January 16, 1994,
President Bill Clinton
met in Geneva with Syria's President Hafez el-Assad to discuss
Israel giving up the Golan Heights in exchange for peace.
Within 24 hours a
6.9 Earthquake devastated Southern California.
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On January 21, 1998,
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
was snubbed at the White House when
President Clinton
and
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
refused to have lunch with him. The same day, the
Monica Lewinsky sex scandal erupted.
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On September 28, 1998,
Secretary of State Albright
detailed another
"land for peace"
agreement requiring Israel to
surrender 13 percent of the West Bank and Gaza.
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President Clinton
met with
Yasser Arafat
and
Benjamin Netanyahu
at the White House, followed by
Arafat
telling the United Nations there would soon be a
Palestinian State.
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The same day,
Hurricane Georges
hit the Gulf Coast causing $1 billion in damages.
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On October 15, 1998,
Yassar Arafat
and
Benjamin Netanyahu
met in Maryland to discuss Israel giving up
13 percent of the West Bank and Gaza in exchange for "peace."
Two days later,
tornadoes hit Texas
leaving $1 billion in damages.
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On December 12, 1998,
President Clinton
arrived in the
Palestinian area
to discuss Israel giving up
"land for peace."
The same day,
President Clinton
was
impeached.
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On May 3, 1999,
Yasser Arafat
had scheduled a press conference to announce a
Palestinian state
with
Jerusalem as the capital.
The same day,
the most powerful tornado storms
to hit the United States whipped through
Oklahoma and Kansas.
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On June 8, 2001,
President George W. Bush
sent Secretary Tenet to
Jerusalem
with a proposal to exchange land for a
"Roadmap to Peace."
The same day,
tropical Storm Allison
hit
Texas
causing $7 billion in damage and
closing George Bush Airport for two days.
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As part of a U.S. brokered "disengagement" deal, on
Tisha B'Av,
2005,
Jews
began to be
forcibly evacuated from Gaza.
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The last Jewish residents were dragged out on August 22, 2005.
The very next day,
a tropical depression in the Atlantic turned into
Hurricane Katrina
and headed straight for
New Orleans,
forcing tens of thousands to evacuate.
Property damage
in
New Orleans
exceeded $81 billion.
Nearly
2,000 people died.
It was one of the
deadliest hurricanes in U.S. history.
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The word "Islam" means
submission to the will of Allah.
A "Muslim" is
one who has submitted
to the will of Allah.
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The Islamic concept of
"peace"
is
when the world submits to will of Allah.
In other words, to a fundamental Muslim,
"world peace" means "world Islam."
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The Islamic concept of
"treaty"
is
"hudna,"
which means,
when you are weak make treaties until you grow strong enough to disregard them."
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When an enemy is willing to
negotiate,
it is a sign of their
weakness.
The fundamentalist concept is - when your enemy shows fear and weakness, that is Allah giving them to you -- it is an indicator Allah wants you to attack them.
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Instead of
"land of peace,"
when Hamas took over Gaza, they began
digging more tunnels
and
firing thousands of rockets
into Israel.
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Just
two weeks
after
Jewish residents
were
forcibly removed from Gaza,
followed by
Hurricane Katrina,
President Bush delivered a Day of Prayer and Remembrance address, September 8, 2005:
"Hurricane Katrina
was one of the
worst natural disasters in our Nation's history
and has caused unimaginable devastation and heartbreak throughout the Gulf Coast Region ...
Communities ... decimated
...
Lives ... lost
... Hundreds of thousands of our fellow Americans are suffering great hardship."
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Though not a call to repentance, as past Presidents had proclaimed,
President Bush
did end his
Day of Prayer and Remembrance
with:
"To honor the memory of those who lost their lives, to provide comfort and strength to families of the victims ...
I call upon all Americans to pray to Almighty God
and to perform acts of service ... Across our Nation, many selfless deeds reflect the
promise of the Scripture:
'For I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in.'"
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American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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