Biblicalchronology deals with the dates of the various events recorded in theBible. It has to consider how far theBible contains achronology at all; to what extent the Sacred Writers aimed at exactness, or were satisfied with round numbers; whether, and to what extent, textualerrors and other sources of corruption have crept into the numbers of theBible; and finally, what relation exists between the chronologies that have been handed down by neighbouring nations and that which exists in theBible. "There is no Chronology of theBible", wrote Silvester de Sacy; and, though this saying is too sweeping, it may be said withtruth that for large parts of theBible there is little to guide us to an exact determination as to when the events related happened. It is not merely that in the matter of numbers the Hebrew text has not always reached us incorrupt (cf. the differences between the Hebrew,Septuagint, andSamaritan Pentateuchs), but the Books of Scripture, moreover, are not a mere history. Some of them, as the Psalms, are in no sense such. And even those that are so, are not written primarily from the point of view of history. Else, e.g., why two parallel histories of the kingdom — Kings and Chronicles? It is because, asFather Cornely says of the Book of Kings ("Introductio", Vol. II, i, p. 284), it had a higher end than the historical, viz., to show the peoples of Israel and of Juda that it was their wickedness that brought destruction on them, and, by setting before them theproofs ofGod's mercy, to lead them back to the observance of the Law. On the other hand, the Book of Chronicles (D. V. Paralipomenon) written after the Exile, by setting forth the splendours of ancient ritual, sought to move them to the worthy celebration of Divine worship (op. cit., p. 324). What complicates the earlier periods of Bible history is the fact that there was no recognized era (such as the Dionysian Era of our own times) to reckon events from, though for the Roman world the founding ofRome in the eighth century gradually began to be recognized as such, and, in later times, among theJews, thedate of the defeat of Nicanor by Seleucus Nicator, and the establishment of theSeleucid domination inSyria (312 ) came to be looked upon as a fixed era.
In this article the data that exist for the formation of a chronology of the Bible will be briefly discussed under the following heads: (1) Creation of the World; (2) Creation of Man; (3) Creation of Man to the Flood; (4) Flood to the Birth of Abraham; (5) Birth of Abraham to the Exodus; (6) Exodus to the building of Solomon's Temple; (7) Building of the Temple to Fall of Jerusalem; (8) Destruction of Jerusalem to Jesus Christ; (9) Date of the Nativity; (10) Beginning of the Ministry; (11) Duration of the Ministry; (12) Date of the Crucifixion; (13) The Acts of the Apostles.
In an article on Biblicalchronology it is hardlynecessary in these days to discuss thedate of the Creation. At least 200 dates have been suggested, varying from 3483 to 6934 years , all based on the supposition that theBible enables us to settle the point. But it does nothing of the sort. It was natural that in the early days of theChurch, the Fathers, writing with little scientificknowledge, should have had a tendency to explain the days of Genesis, i, as natural days of twenty-four hours. Still, they by no means all did so. Thus the Alexandrian Fathers (St. Clement,Origen, St. Athanasius, and St. Cyril) interpreted the days of Creation ideally, and held thatGod created all things simultaneously. So didSt. Augustine; andSt. Thomas Aquinas hesitated betweenidealism and literalism. The literal interpretation has now been entirely abandoned; and the world is admitted to be of immense antiquity. Professor Dana declares its age to be fifty millions of years; others suggest figures still more startling (cf. Buibert, "In the Beginning";Molloy, "Geology and Revelation"; Hummelauer, "Genesis"; Hastings, "Dictionary of theBible"; Mangenot in Vig., "Dict. de la Bible"; Driver, "Genesis". Perhaps the words of Genesis (i, 2): "The earth was void and empty, and darkness was on the face of the deep", refer to the first phase of the Creation, theastronomical, before the geological period began. On such questions we have no Biblical evidence, and theCatholic is quite free to follow the teaching ofscience.
The question which this subject suggests is: Can we confine the time that man has existed on earth within the limits usually assigned, i.e. within about 4000 years of the birth of Christ? — TheChurch does not interfere with the freedom of scientists to examine into this subject and form the best judgment they can with the aid ofscience. She evidently does not attach decisive influence to thechronology of theVulgate, the official version of theWestern Church, since in the Martyrology forChristmas Day, the creation of Adam is put down in the year 5199 , which is the reading of theSeptuagint. It is, however, certain that we cannot confine the years of man's sojourn on earth to that usually set down. But, on the other hand, we are by no means driven to accept the extravagant conclusions of some scientists. As Mangenot says (Vig., Dict. de la Bible, II, 720 sq.), speaking of the right ofCatholics to follow the teaching ofscience: — "certains tenants de l'archéologie préhistorique ont abusé de cette liberté et assigné une antiquité très reculeé à l'humanité" (certain champions of prehistoric archæology have abused this liberty and assigned to thehuman race an extremely remote antiquity). Thus Guibert writes (op. cit., p. 28): "Haeckel names more than 100,000 years; Burmeister supposedEgypt was peopled more than 72,000 years ago; Draper attributes toEuropean man more than 250,000 years; according to M. Joly, certain geologists accord to thehuman race 100,000 centuries; and G. de Mortillet shows that man's existence reaches to about 240,000 years." He adds, however: "These numbers have been built up on such arbitrary and fragile bases, thattruescience could not tolerate them long." In fact, M. Guibert is of opinion that with our presentknowledge there is nothing compelling us to extend the existence of man beyond 10,000 years. Such questions as the antiquity of civilization, which had reached a high pitch inBabylonia andEgypt 4000 years the radical differences of language at the same early period, differences of race (cf. the white, black, and yellow races), which do not seem to have been modified within the historic period, and the remains of human workmanship going back to a very remote antiquity — all these things seem to lead to the conclusion that the existence of man on earth goes back far beyond the traditional 4,000 years. Professor Driver says ("Genesis", p. xxxvi): "Upon the most moderate estimate it cannot be less than 20,000 years."
The period from the Creation to theFlood is measured by the genealogical table of the tenpatriarchs inGenesis 5 andGenesis 7:6. But the exact meaning ofChapter 5 has not been clearly defined. Critical writers point out that the numberten is a common one amongst ancient peoples in the list of their prehistoric heroes, and that they attribute fabulous lengths to the lives of these men; thus, the Chaldeans reckon for their first ten heroes, who lived in the period from the Creation to theFlood, a space of 432,000 years. This seems to point to some common nucleus oftruth or primitive tradition which became distorted and exaggerated in the course of ages. Various explanations have been given of chapter v to explain the short time it seems to allow between the Creation and theFlood. One is that there are lacunæ in it, and, though it is not easy to see how that can be, still it has to be remembered that they exist in St. Matthew (i, 8) in precisely similar circumstances. That there are difficulties about the genealogical table in chapter v, weknow; for, as may be seen from the accompanying table, the total number of years in the Hebrew,Samaritan, andSeptuagint differs, in the Hebrew, it being 1656, in theSamaritan, 1307, and in theSeptuagint, 2242.
| Names of the Patriarchs | Age at birth of son: — Hebrew Samaritan Sept. | ||
| Adam Seth Enos Cainan Mahaliel Jared Enoch Methusalem Lamech Noah FromNoah toFlood | 130 105 90 70 65 162 65 187 182 500 100 | 130 105 90 70 65 62 65 67 53 500 100 | 230 205 190 170 165 162 165 167 188 500 100 |
| Creation toFlood | 1656 | 1307 | 2342 |
From an inspection of the above table it is obvious that the diversity is due to systematic change — whether to increase the total length of the period or to reduce the age at which thepatriarchs had children or for some other reason, weknow not. One thing can be confidently asserted, that the length of time between the creation of Adam and theFlood cannot be restricted within the period traditionally set down. It may also be said that "for this period thechronology of theBible is quite uncertain" (Vigouroux, Dict., 273), and that the freedom of theCatholic in investigating thechronology of this period is quite unrestricted.
The years between theFlood andAbraham are computed in theBook of Genesis by thegenealogy of11:10-26.
| Names of the Patriarchs | Age at birth of son: — Hebrew Samaritan Sept. | ||
| Sem (father of Arphaxad) Arphaxad (father of Cainan) Cainan (father ofSale) Sale (father of Heber) Heber (father of Phaleg) Phaleg (father of Reu) Reu (father of Sarug) Sarug (father of Nachor) Nachor (father of Thare) Thare (father of Abraham) | 102 35 30 34 30 32 30 29 70 | 102 135 130 134 130 132 130 79 70 | 102 135 130 130 134 130 132 130 79 70 |
| Years from birth of Sem to birth of Abraham Deduct years of Sem's age at time of flood Add for age of Abraham at time of his call Hence, number of years fromFlood to Call of Abraham | 392 100 | 1042 100 | 1172 100 |
| 292 75 | 942 75 | 1072 75 | |
| 367 | 1017 | 1147 | |
Again, however, the numbers in the table above differ in the Hebrew,Samaritan, andSeptuagint, being respectively 367, 1017, and 1147; and it will be observed that, as a rule, the Greek andSamaritan agree against the Hebrew. Indeed they are identical, except that the name of Cainan, whose age at the birth ofSale is given as 130 years, is to be found in the Greek only. Whether or not the original table contained the name Cainan, we cannot tell. Some hold that it was introduced into theSeptuagint to increase the length of time between theFlood and Abraham, or again to make the number of thepatriarchs between theFlood and Abraham equal to that of those between Adam and theFlood. At any rate this genealogy gives rise to many questions, thus: Is the name Cainan a later insertion, or has it dropped out from the Hebrew? It is given by St. Luke (iii, 36). Again, are there any lacunæ? For, according toscience, the length of this period was much greater than appears from the genealogical table. There is no difficulty in admitting such lacunæ, for weknow that St. Matthew (i, 8) says: — Jorum begot Ozias", though between the two intervened Ochozias, Joab, and Amasias. For, as Professor Sayce says (Early History of the Hebrews, 144), "son inSemitic idiom was frequently equivalent to descendant". We have also instances of similar omissions in I Chron., vi, 1, and in I Esdr., vii, 1-5. With critical scholars theFlood was a very partial affair. It is not, however, the business of the chronologist to enter into a discussion of that matter. In any case, whether we follow the traditional or critical view, the numbers obtained from the genealogy of the Patriarchs in chapter xi must be greatly augmented, in order to allow time for such a development of civilization, language, and race type as had been reached by the time of Abraham.
At the birth of Isaac, Abraham is said to have been 100 years old (Genesis 21:5); Isaac was sixty at the birth of Jacob (Genesis 25:26); Jacob arrived inEgypt, at the age of 130 (xlvii, 9). These figures, added, give 290; add to this 430 (the number of years spent byIsrael inEgypt) and we get 720 years, which would be the length of time between the birth of Abraham and the Exodus. A difficulty arises, since theSamaritanPentateuch and theSeptuagint read inExodus 12:40: "The abode of theChildren of Israel that they made inEgypt and the land ofCanaan was 430 years." If this be correct, then only 215 years are left for the sojourn inEgypt, 215 years being required for the sojourn inCanaan, as we have to subtract 75, the age of Abraham when he came toCanaan, from 290 (see above). Still, not all themanuscripts of theSeptuagint adopt this reading; and, in any case, we are only face to face with another such diversity between the Greek and Hebrew as is to be found in the genealogies of the Patriarchs.
Let us now bring these facts into relation with theChristian Era. For (1 Kings 6:1) the fourth year of King Solomon is said to have fallen in the 480th year after the Exodus; and Ussher dates the reign of King Solomon from 1014-975 But as the Temple was begun in the fourth year of that king, or in 1010, the Exodus took place in the year 1490 How do these results square with the teaching ofscience? Professor Sayce, from the connexion of Abraham withAmraphel in the episode related in Genesis, xiv, says that "we can approximately fix the period when thefamily of Terah migrated from Ur of the Chaldees. It was about 2300 , if thechronology of the nativeBabylonian historians is correct" (Early History of the Hebrews, 12). Then again he tells us that "Chanaan could not have been invaded by theIsraelites until after the fall of the eighteenth dynasty. When Khu-n-aten died it was still anEgyptian province, garrisoned byEgyptian troops" (Higher Criticism and the Monuments, 241). This we learn from the Tel-el-amarna tablets. So we are taken to a period after the death of Ramses II in 1281 for thedate of the Exodus, which most likely took place in the reign of Meneptah, son and successor of Ramses, earlier than the year 1200 This is not the traditional date of the Exodus, but as Father Hummelauer (Genesis, p. 29) says, it is the conclusion of most men in these days. Nor is there anything to prevent the student of theOld Testament from endeavouring to throw all the light he can upon the vexed question of Biblicalchronology, considering how involved it often is in obscurity.
The Third Book of Kings (vi, 1) states that Solomon began to build the Temple in the 480th year (theSeptuagint gives 440 years) after the Exodus. For theCatholic, that passage seems to settle the question. But a difficulty arises from the fact that there is almost a consensus of scientific opinion that the Exodus fromEgypt took place in the reign of Meneptah, or, possibly, that of his successor, Seti II. Moreover we are driven to a date later than the years 1400 for the Exodus, since up to thatdate, Assyriologists and Egyptologists agree, Palestine was anEgyptian province, with anEgyptian governor (Driver, "Genesis", p. xxix). Ramses II, the builder of Pithom and Raamses, was thePharaoh of the oppression, and as he reigned from 1348-1281 (Sayce) we have to descend to one of his successors to find thePharaoh of the Exodus. Hence we are driven to his immediate successor, Meneptah, at earliest, and to about the year 1277 (Early History of the Hebrews, 150) for thedate of the Exodus. On the other hand, thedate of the building of the Temple cannot be put later than the middle of the tenth century But if we take the time between these two dates, we are left with only about 327 years, as against 480 required by1 Kings 6:1. Wellhausen does not treat thechronology seriously (Prolegomena, 229), but, in company with many other critics, pronounces it to be merely artificial. They say that the number 480 is made up of twelve times 40; forty being taken as a generation; and so the number 40 predominates amongst chronological numbers in this part of Scripture. Thus the time in thedesert was 40 years; Othoniel, Debora, Geneon, each ruled for 40 years. Aod ruled for twice 40, or 80 years; the land was under thePhilistines 40 years, andDavid reigned for the same period. But the following facts must be taken into consideration. Professor Sayce points out that "40 years in Hebrew idiom merely signified an indeterminate and unknown period oftime, and theMoabite Stone shows that the same idiom existed also in theMoabite language" (Early History of the Hebrews, 146). Chronology in those days was in its infancy; and that the dates were only roughly given is obvious from the recurrence of round numbers. If we were to write down all the numbers that occur during this period, as Father Hummelauer does in his commentary on Judges (p. 12), we should find that the number 40 recurs by no means as often as we are led to suppose. The difficulty remains that1 Kings 6:1, gives for the length of this period 480 years;science seems to say "not more than 327". But we have to notice the uncertainties that surround thechronology of this period. We have also to point out that Wellhausen and Stade regard6:1, as a late insertion (Burney, "Hebrew Text of Kings", 58). If this were the case it would meet the difficulty; and perhaps it is rendered more likely by the fact that in the Greek this verse is inserted before5:31-32, and also that it reads 440 instead of 480. We conclude, therefore, that thedate of the Exodus was about 1277, the monarchy was founded by Saul, 1020;David mounted the throne, 1002; Solomon in 962, and the Temple was begun, 958
"On gvoit", says Mangenot (in Vig., Dict. de la Bible, s.v. "Chronologie", 732), "la chronologie de l'époque des rois d'Israël et de Juda n'est pas aussi ferme et aussi assurée qu'on le croit communément. Elle aurrait besoin d'être raccordée avec la chronologie assyrienne" (It is plain that thechronology of the period of the kings ofIsrael and Juda is not so settled and ascertained as is commonly supposed. It must be made to accord with the Assyrianchronology). There are certainly textualerrors among the numbers. Comparing2 Kings 8:26, with2 Chronicles 22:2, we find that in the former, Ocozias is said to have been twenty-two years old when he began to reign, in the latter, forty-two. Nor can a critical writer say that the chronicler was ill-informed; one of the principles of Wellhausen and all hisschool is that Kings was the principal source of Chronicles. Is not this an obvious case of text-corruption? How else, too, can we account for the fact that the Book of Kings gives the sum of the reigns of the kings who reigned from Roboam to the death of Ochozias as 95, whereas it gives the sum of the years from Jeroboam to the death of Joram as ninety-eight, though Jeroboam came to the throne the same year as Roboam, and Ochozias died the same day as Joram? For if the writer of Kings made use of all the clever artificial devices, with which he is credited by critical writers, it is incredible that such an obviouserror should have been committed by him. And so it may be said of his giving as the sum of the years from the accession ofJehu of Israel to the fall ofSamaria as 143 years, whilst he gives the interval between the accession of Athalia of Juda (who began her reign in the same year as Jehu) and the same event as 165 years.
A development in the method of recording dates seems to have taken place among theJews during this period. Events were dated inBabylonia by the reign of the kings; inAssyria, regular officials were appointed every year, calledlimmi, by whose name the year was known, just as the consuls inRome and the eponymous archons in Athens. Lists of thelimmi for the years 909-666 have been discovered (Sayce, "Early History of the Hebrews", 147). This chronological system affected theJews; records for chronicles were thus kept among them, and are frequently referred to in the Book of Kings. So, too, we read, among the lists of royal officials, of a recorder or chronicler. It istrue an objection is sometimes raised (cr. Hastings, Dict., I, 400), that the references are not to the Chronicles themselves, but to works based in some way upon them. This, however, seems a purely gratuitous assertion. That the references are to the Book of Chronicles, and not simply to the chronicles, would seem to imply no more than that the chronicles of the different kings were in some way united so as to form a single volume, of which it is quite possible that copies were made. Nor is it extravagant to suppose that great efforts would have been made to save the royal records at the destruction ofSamaria, especially as there was a royal official, called the chronicler, who would have had care of them.
If we come now to the actual figures themselves, there is not a serious divergency between them and the results of profane history, whilst in many cases they correspond exactly. What we should naturally expect is, that the farther back we go, the more general would be theknowledge ofchronology shown, and so we find it is in regard to the history of the kings. That for the most part fractions of a year are neglected, makes it clear that the writer dealt in round numbers. And yet we find that from the death of Solomon to the accession of Athalia and Jehu, who began to reign in the same year, there is only a divergency of three years in 90 between the Kingdoms of Juda andIsrael; whilst from thatdate to the destruction ofSamaria the difference is only 21 years on the other side. So that the total difference, in a period of about 255 years, is one of only 19 years. But then it cannot be admitted that this is a pureerror. Many writers say that the deficiency in the length of the years of the kings ofIsrael is to be supplied by the introduction of two interregnums in the list of the kings of Israel, perhaps one after Jeroboam II, the other after Phacee; or again, that two of the kings of Juda reigned contemporaneously with their fathers. It cannot be pretended that thetrue explanation has been found. The practical point is that the student is at liberty to throw what light he can on the problem from external sources; and that thechronology of the Book of Kings, as it now stands, is quite adequate for the purposes for which it was supplied. One thing iscertain, that the equation of Cheyne's "Encyclopædia Biblica" (I, 770) is a mere caricature; "This table shows that at the end of the 258th year after the division of the kingdom, there had elapsed 258 synchronistic years, 2417/12 years of reign inIsrael, and 260 such years in Juda; and we have thus the singular equation 258 = 2417/12 = 260." Nodoubt this is very clever; whether it is equally instructive, from the point of view of serious history, is another matter. Let one illustration show: in1 Kings 15:1, we are told that Abiam reigned over Juda in the eighteenth year of Jeroboam, King ofIsrael. In verse 9 we are told that, after his death, recorded in verse 8, Asa his son became king, in the twentieth year of Jeroboam. In the second verse we read of Abiam that "he reigned three years inJerusalem". Now what does Cheyne's "Encyclopædia" do in the "singular equation"? Computing the years from the eighteenth to the twentieth year of Jeroboam, according to the modern fashion, it puts them down under one heading of the equation as two years, then under another heading it gives the same period, computed, as is known perfectly well, according to the old Jewish fashion, as three years; and having finally drawn up in this way three different lists of figures, it works out "a singular equation". — No wonder; yet the writer, apart from the passage in question, must have known that from the fourth to the sixth year of Ezechias was counted as three years by theJews (2 Kings 18:9, 10), and that from Friday to Sunday was likewise reckoned as three days (Luke 24:7).
In places thechronology of the kings is far from clear. What light is thrown upon it by thechronology of the surrounding nations?Egypt may be left out, because little help can be got from it. Sayce says of itschronology that "it is more disputable even than that ofIsrael." ("Hebrews", 453.) But bringing to our help the fragment of theTyrian annals quoted byJosephus, the foundation of the Temple may be fixed, according to Sayce, for about the year 969, which would be very near the date given above. Having fixed the year when the Temple was begun, weknow that Solomon reigned from 973 to 936, andDavid from 1013 to 973. So, to speak roughly, the revolt of the Ten Tribes must have taken place somewhere about the year 936.
AlthoughSt. Jerome says, in writing to thepriest Vitalis, that to dwell on such matters is rather for a man of leisure than for a studiousperson, still we must confess it would be satisfactory toknow how the general discrepancy arose between the Biblical dates and the corresponding Assyrian dates — from the accession of Roboam to the taking ofSamaria. We have fixed roughly thedate of the revolt of the Ten Tribes for the year 936 But the traditional date is 975, and if we follow the dates for the kings down to the taking ofSamaria, it will be found that the usual interpretation of the Biblicalchronology makes those dates about 40 years earlier than is possible according to the Assyrian chronological canon. ThusKing Achab of Israel reigned from 918 to 896; but in the Assyrian inscriptions he is said to have been present at the Battle of Karkar in 854. Ozias was King of Juda from 810 to 758, but, according to the inscriptions, he was atwar with Tiglath-pileser about the year 741. Again, Manahen's reign overIsrael extended from 770 to 759, but on the monuments he is inscribed as a tributary of Tiglath-pileser in 738. These examples seem to show that according to the traditional interpretation, the dates of the kings are about 40 years too high.
On the other hand, it has to be remembered that there is no fixed Biblechronology, though there are synchronisms and lengths of reigns given in the Books of Kings. There are, moreover, textualerrors, uncertainty in regard to pre-dating and post-dating, unreliability as to the accuracy and interpretation of names on the Assyrian tablets. So that, as we should expect, "few tables of dates furnished byOld Testament chronologists exactly agree" (Hstings, "Bibl. Dict.", I, 403). Another point has to be remembered. Elaborate artificial explanations of thechronology of theBible from the building of the Temple to the fall ofJerusalem are given. These explanations embrace not only the period from Solomon to Achaz (741 ), but down from that time to the fall ofJerusalem (586 ). But it iscertain that thechronology of the Books of Kings from Achaz to the destruction ofJerusalem, a period of 155 years, is not artificial (cf. Hastings, 401); it is in agreement with the Assyrianchronology. And does not this fact throw considerabledoubt upon the whole theory of artificiality?
Finally, theMoabite Stone, referred to above, states thatIsrael dwelt in Medeba during the days of Omri and half the days of his son — altogether 40 years. Of this Professor Sayce says: "The real length of time was not more than 15 years" (Early History of the Hebrews, 146). Now, if this be so, may we not at least argue that either theMoabite Stone is accurate or not? If it is accurate, then the number 40 was used in a most loose fashion as a round number in those days; if inaccurate, then it is clear that even the contemporary stone records of the age of the kings cannot be always trusted. How does this affect theBabylonian tablets and their evidence?
We conclude then that the Temple was built about 969. The secession of the Ten Tribes took place about 937. The fall ofSamaria in 722 or 721, and the destruction ofJerusalem 536
The two great authorities for Jewishchronology after the destruction ofJerusalem are the Books of Esdras and the First Book of Machabees. There are other books too, but their evidence is so uncertain, and in certain cases so much disputed, that we do not propose to make use of them. Such are, for instance, the prophecy of Daniel and the prophecies of Aggeus and Zacharias. In the First Book of Machabees and the Books of Esdras we have generally admitted first-rate authorities. Thus Cheyne's "Encyclopædia" (III, 2865) writes of Machabees I, "The book has proved itself worthy to hold the highest rank as trustworthy chronology", and again, "The accuracy of the dates given being in the main beyond all question". The book embraces the years 175-135 , and the chief events aredated according to theSeleucid Era, 312 Of the Books of Esdras, Batten says, in Hastings, "The historical value of these books is very great". Difficulties exist in regard to the names of Darius and Artaxerxes. Is the Darius referred to Darius I or Darius II? — Without muchdoubt, Darius I. — Van Hoonacker is inclined to identify the Artaxerxes of chapter vi with the second of that name, and so would place the return of Esdras to Jerusalem under Artaxerxes II, in 404, contrary to the view of most commentators. Nehemias, he says, returned under Artaxerxes I in 444. But it is commonly held that Esdras returned in 457 and Nehemias in 444 The first band of captives returned to Jerusalem under Zorobabel in the first year of Cyrus, i.e. 536 They laid the foundation of the Temple, which was finished in 516.
Weknow nothing of thechronology of theJews after this till the time of the Machabees. But the First Book of Machabees gives information about the period 174-135; it opens with a description of the position of theJews under Antiochus Epiphanes. Then comes an account of the rising under Mathathias, in 167, and his death. Next followed his sonJudas who continued the struggle till he died in 161. Jonathan,Judas's brother, was the next leader till independence under Simon. Simon was made ruler in 141, wasmurdered in 135, and was succeeded by his son John Hyrcanus in the same year.
At first sight it seems a simple thing to fix thedate of the birth ofJesus Christ. Was it not in the beginning of the first year of theChristian Era? It was amonk of the sixth century, namedDionysius Exiguus (the Little) who fixed our presentChristian Era, laying down thatJesus Christ was born on the 25th of December, 753, and commencing the new era from the following year, 754. That date, as we shall see, cannot be correct and, instead of being an improvement on, is further from thetruth than the dates assigned by the early Fathers,St. Irenæus andTertullian, who fixed thedate of the Nativity in the 41st year ofAugustus, that is to say, 3 years or 751. We must note first that St. Matthew says (ii, 1) thatOur Saviour was born "in the days ofKing Herod".Josephus tells us (Antiquities, XVII, viii, 1), thatHerod died "having reigned 34 yearsde facto since the death of Antigonus, and 37 yearsde jure since the Romandecree declaring him king". Weknow also that he began to reign in the consulship of Domitius Calvinus and Asinius Pollio, 40 , in the 184th Olympiad (Ant., xiv, 5); and that he became kingde facto in the consulship of Marcus Agrippa and Canidius Ballus, in the 185th Olympiad (Ant., XIV, xvi, 4). These calculations do not make it sure whetherHerod died in the year 3, 4, or 5 but it is most probable that it was in the year 4 That date is corroborated by an eclipse of the moon which occurred (Ant., XVII, vi, 4) on the very night thatHerod burnt Matthias alive, a few days before his own death; for there was an eclipse of the moon from 12 March to 13 March, 4 All this points to the fact thatHerod died in the year 4 and that soOur Saviour must have been born before thatdate. In May, October, and December of the year 7 a conjunction of the planets Jupiter and Saturn took place. Kepler, theastronomer, suggested that perhaps this phenomenon was connected with the star seen by theMagi (Matthew 2:2). But thisidea is altogether too uncertain to be entertained seriously, or to form a basis for any reliablechronology. Nor can we come to any more definite conclusion from what St. Matthew says of the sojourn of the childJesus inEgypt (ii, 14, 19, 22), where he remained till the death ofHerod.Herod ordered a massacre of the children up to two years old according to the information about thedate of the Nativity which he had received from theMagi. In itself there is nothing unlikely in that, for weknow thatHerod was a most cruel and whimsical man, having, for instance, summoned to his bedside all the principal men of the Jewish nation with a view to having them shot with darts at the moment of his death, so that there might be universal lamentation when he left this life. We do not, however,know what informationHerod possessed as to thedate of the Nativity, whether theMagi gave him accurate information, or whether they possessed it themselves; what the incident would seem to show was thatOur Saviour was born some time beforeHerod's death, probably two years or more. So that, ifHerod died in the year 4 , we should be taken to 6 or 7 as the year of the Nativity.
But a difficulty is raised as to thedate of the Nativity in connexion with the Roman census mentioned in the second chapter of St. Luke. The Nativity took place after adecree had gone forth fromCæsar Augustus that the whole Roman Empire should be enrolled. The words "This enrolling was first made by Cyrinus, the governor ofSyria" (verse 2), or, more correctly, "This firstcensus was taken whilst Quirinius was governor ofSyria", are the source of the difficulty. For weknow that Publius Sulpicius Quirinius was governor ofSyria, and that a census was made in 7, about eleven years afterHerod's death, and it is not denied that Cyrinus was Quirinius. Schürer, in "The Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ" (Div. I, Vol. II, 105-143), endeavours to prove that the statement is an inaccuracy on the part of St. Luke, and, with more or less emphasis, practically all the criticalschool takes up the same attitude. But prima facie we are not disposed to accept the contention that St. Luke was inignorance on such a very elementary subject. C. H. Turner, in Hastings' "Dictionary of theBible", thinks he may have been misinformed, since "his acquaintance with Palestine was perhaps limited to the two years'imprisonment ofSt. Paul in Cæsarea". Such anidea seems most unlikely. St. Luke had made careful inquiry about the facts he relates in his Gospel; he had "diligently attained to all things from the beginning", and that too from those who "were eyewitnesses andministers of the word" (i, 2, 3). For such a man it seems incredible that he should not have taken the trouble to inquire, not as to some petty Jewish custom, but as to such a public and important event as a Roman census, and to have made himself acquainted with the name of the Roman governor at the time.
At the same time it is not clear what the explanation of the note about Quirinius is. Some suggest thatpróte has, as it undoubtedly has sometimes in classical Greek, the force ofprótera, so that the sense of the passage would be: "This census was held before that which took place when Quirinius was governor ofSyria". But there is another explanation. It istrue the writer of the article on Chronology in Cheyne's "Encyclopædia" says, with characteristic positiveness, that "any census inJudea before the well-known one in the year 7 is impossible". But on the other hand, Turner, in Hastings' "Dictionary", thinks that there is no inherent improbability in the hypothesis of a census inJudea somewhere within the years 8-5 There is very littledoubt, from an inscription found atTivoli in 1764, that Quirinius was twice governor ofSyria; once, as is well known, from 6-11, but also once at an earlier period. Not at the time ofHerod's death, for Quinctilius Varus was then governor; and before him came Sentius Saturninus from 9-6 , before him Titius. But there is no reason why Quirinius should not be placed after Varus. In that case Saturninus would have been the one to begin the census; it would have been suspended for a time, on account of the death ofHerod, and then continued and completed under Quirinius, so that his name would have been associated with it. Perhaps this may explain whyTertullian speaks of a census made by Sentius Saturninus underAugustus (Adv. Marcionem, iv, 19); but it is hardly likely, if he had found another and, apparently, a wrong name in St. Luke, that he would not have taken any notice, or given any explanation of it.
From the evidence it seems that thedate of the Nativity given byDionysius Exiguus is not the right one, for it is afterHerod's death.Tertullian and Irenæus are nearer to thetruth with the years 2 or 3 ; but it must be placed still further back, and probably the year 7 will not be found to be much astray.
There is reason to suppose that the early Fathers (such asSt. Clement of Alexandria andTertullian) and later writers (asDionysius Exiguus), in trying to fix a date for the Nativity, argued back from the synchronisms connected with the beginning ofOur Saviour's public life, joined with St. Luke's statement, "AndJesus himself was beginning about the age of thirty years" (iii, 23;—a’utòs ên ’Iesoûs ’archómenos ‘oseì ’etôn triákonta); for they took that passage to mean thatJesus Christ had not completed thirty years, but was in the beginning of his thirtieth year (cf. Epiphanius, "Hær.", ii, 16). But’archómenos does not bear such a meaning here; it is not immediately connected with the phrase‘oseì ’etôn triákonta, which means "about thirty years", and might without any straining of its sense be used for a year or two more or less than thirty. So that, to determine thedate ofOur Lord'sbaptism from this passage, we should have to add on about thirty years to thedate of the Nativity (about 7 years ), which would leave us with the indefinite result that it might have taken place anywhere between 23 and 27. But in the Gospel of St. John (ii, 20), shortly before thePasch, and after themiracle of Cana,Jesus cast the buyers and sellers out of the Temple; and theJews in upbraiding Him used the words,tesserákonta kaí ‘èks ’étesin ’okodométhe ‘o naòs oûtos (Six and forty years has this temple been a-building), meaning, that at that time theJews had been forty-six years at work building the Temple. In that passage is contained a clear mark of time. For thoughJosephus tells us in one place (Bell. Jud., I, xxi, 1), that the Temple was begun in the fifteenth year ofHerod, and in another (Ant., XV, ii, 1) in the eighteenth, still in all probability, as Turner says in Hastings (p. 405), the former is a correction of the latterdate, and the fact is that the Temple was begun in the eighteenth year ofHerod'sde facto reign (which began in 37 ), or in other words, that it was begun in 19 We should thus arrive at the year 27, for thedate of thePasch followingOur Saviour'sbaptism. Again, St. Luke (iii, 1), assigning a date to the beginning ofSt. John the Baptist's mission, says it was "in the fifteenth year of the reign ofTiberius Cæsar". The fifteenth year ofTiberius Cæsar would be 28, and would make itnecessary for us, if correct, to alter the date fixed forOur Saviour'sbaptism. But Professor Ramsay (St. Paul the Traveller, p. 387) thinks the fifteenth year ofTiberius is reckoned from 12, when he was associated withAugustus in the government of the empire. That would take us to 6 for the beginning of St. John's ministry, and would allow enough time for thebaptism ofOur Lord in 27.
Various periods have been defended for the length ofChrist's ministry. St. Irenæus (Hær., II, xxii, 3-6) goes so far as to suggest a period of fifteen years. On the other hand, many of the early Fathers, as well as many writers of our own time, confine the public life ofJesus to one year. Thus von Soden, in Cheyne's "Encyclopædia", says, "The evidence here points on the whole to one year". The difference of opinion is based, for the most part, upon the different accounts given by St. John and theSynoptists ofChrist's public life. Whilst theFourth Gospel indicates three or even more paschs, it is not so easy to deduce even two from the Synoptist narrative. It would be possible to interpret St. John's Gospel so as to fit in with the theory of there being only one year's ministry, provided we could omit, with Westcott and Hort, the wordstò páscha from the passage (vi, 4),ên dè ’eggùs tò páscha ‘e ‘eortè tôn ’Ioudaíon (Now thepasch, the festival day of theJews, was near at hand). But even the great names of these two textual critics cannot outweigh the fact that all themanuscripts and versions, and nearly all the Fathers, containtò páscha.
Accordingly, St. John mentions at least three paschs in the course of the ministry. One (ii, 13) shortly after thebaptism, another of which we have just been speaking (vi, 4), and the third, at the time of the Passion (xi, 55). So that the simplest explanation of the length of the ministry would be to say it extended over two years. But how does that conclusion fit in with the narrative of theSynoptists? The difficulty is that St. Mark, the most complete witness of what is called the "synoptic tradition", does not take much account of time. As Papias said, "he wrote accurately, if not orderly" (’akribôs ’égraphen, o’u méntoi táksei. — Eus., III, xl). Still, even if St. Mark does not make mention of paschs, it does not follow that there were none. Thus, weknow that there was apasch shortly afterour Saviour'sbaptism (John 2:13), and yet St. Mark does not mention it. He does, however, mention one in xiv, 1, thePasch of the Passion. And if he does not mention anotherpasch, he makes remarks from which we can infer the existence of one. Thus in ii, 23, he speaks of the plucking of the ears of corn and evidently refers to the early summer, whilst vi, 39, with its allusion to the green grass, seems to take us to the spring-time. From the events related between these two points it seems clear that a year intervened, and so, as in St. John, we have to find room for anotherpasch. Our conclusion is that the most natural explanation of St. Mark would lead us to a duration of two years for the ministry.
It is clear that the Crucifixion took place underPontius Pilate, and henceOur Saviour must have died between 26 and 36 (Ant., XVIII, iv, 2). It is also clearly laid down in the Gospels that the Crucifixion took place on a Friday. For we are told that theResurrection took place on Sunday, and also that it occurred three days after the Crucifixion, but according to the Greek and Jewish mode of reckoning, the third day is what we should call the second day. A difficulty is, however, raised as to whetherOur Saviour died on the 14th or 15th of Nisan. Some are of opinion that, whilst St. John held the Crucifixion to have been on the 14th (xix, 31), theSynoptists were in favour of the 15th (Mark 15:42). But it does not seem possible that either St. John or St. Matthew, who were so intimately connected with the facts related, should have been mistaken in this matter, or that, in the same way, either theSynoptists or theFourth Gospelerred. Nor are we without explanations to reconcile the apparent differences between the Gospels. St. John, weknow, favours the 14th of Nisan. But St. Mark, too, tells us how Simon ofCyrene helped Christ to carry the Cross (xv, 21), and howJoseph of Arimathea buried the Body — facts which seem to tell against the Festival Day (xv, 43 sqq.). Besides, the weight ofChristian antiquity is in favour of the 14th of Nisan, as are such competent modern scholars as Professor Sanday and the late Bishop Westcott.
If we could make up our mind fully that the Crucifixion took place on the 14th of Nisan, it would help us to determine in what year it happened. For though we cannot always be certain whether a Friday fell on the 14th or 15th of Nisan, still we can be fairly satisfied that the years 29, 30, and 33 fulfilled thenecessary conditions, though von Soden, in Cheyne's "Encyclopædia", is of opinion that the year 29 does not do so. It has already been seen that the Crucifixion must have happened somewhere between 26 and 36. It may also be taken that it did not occur after 33, because in the next yearCaiphas was deposed from thehigh-priesthood by Vitellius. We are left, then, with the years 29, 30, and 33 to choose between for the death ofJesus Christ. We cannot be certain in our choice. But naturally we should expect thedate of such an important event to be handed down by tradition; and we find a very ancient tradition, going back to 150, for the date 29, in the consulship of the Gemini. In favour of it areClement of Alexandria,Origen, the ApocryphalActs of Pilate,Hippolytus, and the Pseudo-Tertullian.
Frederick Blass (Acta Apostolorum, p. 21) tells us of thechronology of theActs of the Apostles that we cannot be certain of our dates within a less period than about ten years. That is a strong statement, but nothing will bring home to us better how ambiguous thechronology is than the large number of different systems that have been adopted by interpreters of this book.
Taking the year 29 as that of the Crucifixion, three other dates are at once fixed. For theResurrection took place three days after the Crucifixion; theAscension 40 days after that, and ten days later the Holy Ghost descended on theApostles. Other dates are not so simple. InActs 12:1-25 is given an account ofHerod'spersecution, themartyrdom of St. James, St. Peter'smiraculous liberation fromprison, on the death ofHerod, and the return of Sts. Paul and Barnabas fromJerusalem, whither they had travelled to convey thealms of theChurch in Antioch (xi, 30). All these events seem closely connected with the death ofHerod (xii, 23); and from whatJosephus says, and the evidence of thecoinage, we cannot be far wrong in placing that event in the year 44. From thedate of the recall of Felix, governor ofJudea, and the arrival of his successor, Festus, we ought to be able to decide the year of the end ofSt. Paul's career, as sketched in the Acts. For shortly after the arrival of Festus,St. Paul was sent aprisoner toRome. Harnack places this event in 57, Lightfoot in 61, Ramsay in 60. Perhaps we may say 62, for he was sent toRome by Festus, shortly after his arrival inJudea. But this was not long before the death of Pallas in 62 (Tac., Znn., XIV, lxv). InRomeSt. Paul remained two years, hence till 64 (Acts 28:30). The Acts end here, but tradition says thatSt. Paul was released at the end of two years' captivity inRome, and paid his long-contemplated visit toSpain (St. Clement,Muratorian Fragment, etc.). He also visited Southern Gaul and, as we learn from the Epistles to Timothy and Titus, among other places, Crete,Macedonia, andMiletus. This expedition would have taken about three years.
St. Paul's recorded missionary journeys, which began when he and Barnabas were sent forth by theHoly Ghost to preach (xiii, 4), ended with his arrest inJerusalem in the year 59 (xxii) before hisimprisonment at Cæsarea andRome. The third missionary journey (xxiii, 23-xxi, 15) must have occupied quite four years, for he spent over two years at Ephesus (xix, 10), besides passing throughMacedonia and Greece, going slowly throughMacedonia and spending three months inCorinth. This journey would have begun, as far as we can see, in the summer of 55. The second journey (xv, 36-xviii, 22), a work mostly of revisiting churches (xv, 36), ended not very long before the third missionary expedition began, probably in 54, and began about three years previously, in 51. The first 29 verses of chapter xv are taken up with the Council ofJerusalem. There is much difference of opinion as to the date to be assigned to it. Thus Harnack places it in 47, Lightfoot in 51, Ramsay in 50. It would seem most likely to have occurred in 51, the year of the beginning of the second missionary journey, for it was concluded only "some days" (xv, 36) before that expedition was begun. Having fixed thedate of the Council ofJerusalem, we are in a position to settle thedate ofSt. Paul's first visit to Jerusalem after hisconversion. For (Galatians 2:1) it was 14 years before the council, or in the year 37. From the same Epistle (i, 18) weknow thatSt. Paul's conversion took place three years previously, in 34. We may place themartyrdom of St. Stephen a year earlier (i.e. in 33) not more; for Saul was still "breathing out threatenings and slaughter" (Acts 9:1) at thedate of hisconversion. The date of the first missionary journey (xiii, 1; xiv, 26) still remains to be dealt with.Herod Agrippa died in 44, asSt. Paul's first journey did not begin till after that event. Moreover, it was finished before the Council ofJerusalem (51). There is no indication in the Acts sufficiently definite to settle the question. It can, however, be safely stated that the journey must have been finished some time previous to the council; because between the two events Paul and Barnabas "abode no small time with the disciples" (xiv, 27).
It may be well to explain here that the uncertainties which surround itschronology in no way detract from the trustworthiness of theBible as an historical document, or from its authority as an inspired record. The further back we go, the more general and in outline are ourideas of history; and so, in Genesis, the whole history of the world to theFlood is contained in a few brief chapters. As it is with the narrative of events, so it is withchronology. Coming farther down in Jewish history, it is obvious that in regard to numbers the text is often at fault, equally obvious that the inspired writer often only wishes to place before us round numbers. Of the latest period the evidence we possess for fixing thechronology of theBible is often inconclusive. It may be safely affirmed that the time has not yet come to fix an authoritativechronology of theBible. A good deal of obscurity and uncertainty remains to be removed. But when the time does come, it may be confidently asserted that the ultimate result will contain nothing derogatory to the authority of theBible.
HUMMELAUER,Genesis (Paris, 1895);Judges (1888);Samuel (1886); CORNELY,Introductio (Paris, 1886); VIGOUROUX,Dict. de la Bible (Paris, 1899); DRIVER,Genesis (London, 1904); BURNEY,Hebrew Text of the Books of Kings (Oxford, 1903); SAYCE,Early History of the Hebrews (London, 1897); SAYCE,Higher Criticism and the Monuments (London, 1894); GIGOT,Introduction (New York, 1900); WELLHAUSEN,Prolegomena (tr. Edinburgh, 1885); HASTINGS,Dict. of the Bible (Edinburgh, 1898); CHEYNE,Encyclopædia Biblica (London, 1899); VAN HOONACKER, Various works about the return from exile (Paris and Ghent); LENORMANT,The Beginnings of History (Eng. tr., London, 1893); RAMSAY,St. Paul the Traveller (London, 1895); SCHÜRER,Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ (tr. Edinburgh, 1906); BLASS,Acta Apostolorum (Göttingen, 1895). See also works referred to in article.
APA citation.Howlett, J.(1908).Biblical Chronology. InThe Catholic Encyclopedia.New York: Robert Appleton Company.http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03731a.htm
MLA citation.Howlett, James."Biblical Chronology."The Catholic Encyclopedia.Vol. 3.New York: Robert Appleton Company,1908.<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03731a.htm>.
Transcription.This article was transcribed for New Advent by WGKofron.In memory of Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio Fidelis servus et prudens, quem constituit Dominus super familiam suam.
Ecclesiastical approbation.Nihil Obstat. November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor.Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.
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