Flavius Josephus
Herod's
Speech on the Eve of the Temple's Reconstruction
Flavius
Josephus, Ant. 15. 382-87
"I think
I need not speak to you, my countrymen, about such other
works as I have done since I came to the kingdom, although I
may say they have been performed in such a manner as to
bring more security to you than glory to myself; for I have
neither been negligent in the most difficult times about
what tended to ease your necessities, nor have the
buildings. I have made been so proper to preserve me as
yourselves from injuries; and I imagine that, with God's
assistance, I have advanced the nation of the Jews to a
degree of happiness which they never had before; and for the
particular edifices belonging to your own country, and your
own cities, as also to those cities that we have lately
acquired, which we have erected and greatly adorned, and
thereby augmented the dignity of your nation, it seems to me
a needless task to enumerate them to you, since you well
know them yourselves; but as to that undertaking which I
have a mind to set about at present, and which will be a
work of the greatest piety and excellence that can possibly
be undertaken by us, I will now declare it to you. Our
fathers, indeed, when they were returned from Babylon, built
this temple to God Almighty, yet does it want sixty cubits
of its largeness in altitude; for so much did that first
temple which Solomon built exceed this temple; nor let any
one condemn our fathers for their negligence or want of
piety herein, for it was not their fault that the temple was
no higher; for they were Cyrus, and Darius the son of
Hystaspes, who determined the measures for its rebuilding;
and it hath been by reason of the subjection of those
fathers of ours to them and to their posterity, and after
them to the Macedonians, that they had not the opportunity
to follow the original model of this pious edifice, nor
could raise it to its ancient altitude; but since I am now,
by God's will, your governor, and I have had peace a long
time, and have gained great riches and large revenues, and,
what is the principal filing of all, I am at amity with and
well regarded by the Romans, who, if I may so say, are the
rulers of the whole world, I will do my endeavor to correct
that imperfection, which hath arisen from the necessity of
our affairs, and the slavery we have been under formerly,
and to make a thankful return, after the most pious manner,
to God, for what blessings I have received from him, by
giving me this kingdom, and that by rendering his temple as
complete as I am able."
note:
Josephus probably copied the speech from the court
archives. Flavius Josephus, Ant. 15. 382-87
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