They say that nothing is known about Jesus and Paul except that which is written about them in what Christians call the New Testament. But nothing is known of Josephus save what he tells us of himself in his writings. And much of what we think we know of Jewish history from the rise of the Macabees to the fall of Masada in 73 AD is derived from his books. Joseph Ben Mattathias, Titus Flavius Josephus (c 40-100 AD), tells us he is of priestly and Hasmonean descent . His Vita or Life was written to justify his betrayal of his country to save his own life and to win favour with the Romans. Strangely enough, though a conscienceless Romanophile in Jerusalem, who would not have tolerated the Christians as they were considered a threat to Roman State religion, he was a proud Judeophile in Rome, who would have also thought that Jesus was illegitimate, a false prophet and a magician. He wrote the Wars of the Jews to praise the Romans in their cause and, later, Against Apion and Antiquities of the Jews to praise the Jews and Judaeism.
However, by following the tradition of Greco-Roman historiography, in what he would have thought to have been a quest for historical truth, Josephus in effect has set his work apart from Biblical Authors before him, and Jewish and Christian writers for centuries after him, who regarded the purpose of history as proof of God controlling the destiny of the Universe. His writing contains statements which are biased, erroneous, embellished with outright fabrication, and include legend and folklore presented as fact. Yet his work is probably as accurate as any Hellenic historian. Although he omits reference to such great exegetes as Hillel, Paul and the Apostles and there are questionable references to Jesus, his chief authority is the everyday life of Judea, its geography, agriculture and the politics of the celebrities of the day, particularly focussed on two of the most critical centuries of recorded history. Indeed the Wars of the Jews is one of the most magnificent literary achievements of all time, which not only tears at the emotions but spurs the imagination and haunts our memory as only a Jewish composition can do.
To be continued
© Pretani Associates 2014