Page 89 - Advanced Biblical Backgrounds Student Textbook
P. 89

516 BCE the year when the rebuilt Temple was dedicated in Jerusalem. Another notable view chooses
               the dates 608 to 538. Returning Jews left Babylonia at various times while some Jews chose to remain in
               Babylonia, thus constituting the first of numerous Jewish communities living permanently in
               the diaspora. Acts 2:9-11 seems to indicate that such communities as these (in diaspora) kept in tune
               with Jewish festivals and travelled to Jerusalem.

               In any case, God sovereignly and providentially sustained his people throughout their captivity in
               Babylon. Although the Jews suffered greatly and faced powerful cultural pressures in a foreign land, they
               maintained their national spirit and religious identity. God raised faithful and uncompromising men,
               such as Daniel, to positions of leadership and influence in the foreign land (Daniel 2:48). Through their
               obedient actions, such men influenced not only the lives of fellow Jews but also those of pagan leaders
               (Dan. 3:8-30). Daniel might have been influential in the release of Jehoiachin, the imprisoned Jewish king
               in Babylonia. (2 Kings 25:27–30)

               Meanwhile, godly men such as Ezekiel communicated God’s counsel to God’s people. Elders acting as
               representatives of Jewish communities frequently visited Ezekiel to hear God’s Word ((Ezekiel 8:1; 14:1;
               20:1). “Apparently, the lines of communication were open too. Jeremiah wrote letters to the captives in
               Babylonia (Jeremiah 29:1). The captives in Babylon also wrote letters to friends in Judah (Jeremiah
               29:25). To what degree they preserved the true faith among the Jews in captivity must be left open to
               question, but they do not seem to have succumbed in any substantial numbers to the idolatry of the
               Babylonians.” 115  This is demonstrated by significant spiritual reform in Jerusalem upon their return,
               recorded in the books of Nehemiah and Ezra.

               Jewish artisans and other skilled men (2 Kings 24:14) evidently advanced their skills while in Babylonia.
               Their participation in building Babylon and other prominent cities afforded them a learning opportunity
               in advanced arts and crafts. Their successful rebuilding of the walls in Jerusalem while fighting off
               enemies (Nehemiah 4:15-23), indicates that a good number of Jewish men possessed some military skill
               they likely acquired from the Babylonian army.

               Clearly, in all this, God still shaped his people for their restoration and the reformation that soon took
               place in Jerusalem, which we will cover in the following chapter.

               Temples Afire

               Temples were the focal point of civic life and the target for invaders.  The patron deities of the city were
               believed to dwell in the temples.  Festivals were held around temples and valuables were deposited in
               them (they were actually the earliest banks).

               For invaders, the capture of the central temple served several purposes, not the least of which was
               obtaining the wealth stored there.  To take the temple was also to show that the gods of the city had
               chosen the conquerors over the local inhabitants.  This meant that the conquerors were now the
               legitimate rules of the people, land, and any possessions.




               115  Vos, H. F. (1999). Nelson’s new illustrated Bible manners & customs: how the people of the Bible really lived (pp.
               312–313). Nashville, TN: T. Nelson Publishers.


                                                             88
   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94