The Building Projects of Herod
Herod was a great Hellenist — a great exponent of classical Greek culture. His buildings had the stamp of classical Greece all over them. The cities he built were not like the typical ones found in the Middle East today. They were thoroughly "Greek" with many special embellishments created by Herod himself. The guiding principle which motivated Herod and his architects was to make things bigger and better than any other in existence. Splendor was the keynote.
One of his monumental buildings, which the people of the Roman world admitted to be the most impressive structure on earth, was the Temple which Herod rebuilt on Mount Moriah in Jerusalem. With all its magnificence, scope, grandeur — gold, rare woods, lavish marble decorations and colossal walls — no building of the twentieth century could begin to compare with it. Herod built the Temple to be one of his crowning achievements — and so it was. It took over 70 years to complete. But strangely, it was finished about 6 years before it was destroyed by the Romans. All that remains today is some of its platform on which the outer courts of the Temple stood, and part of its walls (the famous western — or "Wailing" Wall).
The Temple was an immense structure. It was built on a gigantic stone platform with walls on all sides. These surrounding walls were about a mile in length, 200 feet high and in some places 18 feet thick. Josephus said that "the wall was itself the most prodigious work that was ever heard of by man" (Antiquities of the Jews, XV, 11, 3). Surrounding the Temple enclosure and abutting to the inside of its massive walls was a covered arcade or walkway 45 feet wide and supported by Corinthian columns. Each of the columns — about a thousand in number — was made of single stones, circular in shape, with Corinthian capitals decorated in gold. The ceiling of this arcade was paneled with cedar. "The natural magnificence of it all, the perfect polish, the accurate jointing," said Josephus, "afforded a remarkable spectacle."
But beside the colossal walls and arcade, there was the sanctuary itself near the center of the platform. The sanctuary was made of the finest marble and was the height of a ten-story building. All its gates were covered with gold and its many decorations were of the best workmanship imaginable.
The Sanctuary had everything that could amaze either mind or eyes. Overlaid all around with stout plates of gold, in the first rays of the sun it reflected so fierce a blaze of fire that those who endeavored to look at it were forced to turn away as if they had looked straight at the sun. To strangers as they approached it seemed in the distance like a mountain covered with snow; for any part not covered with gold was dazzling white (Wars, V, 5, 6).
The present archaeological excavation at the southwestern angle of the ancient Temple walls — an excavation sponsored jointly by Hebrew University and Ambassador College (see pictures on page 44) — is uncovering some of the relics associated with this fabulous structure. The archaeologists on the "dig" keep remarking about the sheer majesty and glory of these remains. Herod did nothing in a small way. As an example, the "dig" has been excavating the foundations of piers that supported the largest bridge ever constructed in the Roman Empire — a bridge so enormous that a modern superhighway could be placed on top quite easily. There was certainly nothing common about Herod's building enterprises.
An example of this is another building which almost took the breath away to view it. This was the palace which Herod built for himself in Jerusalem. It was so splendid that Josephus said no tongue could possibly describe it. Leaving aside Herod's own beautiful quarters, this magnificent palace contained immense banqueting halls and quite a number of guestrooms, each having spaces for 100 beds. All the stones of the floors were of different colors — stones that everywhere else were looked on as rare were found in Herod's palace in great profusion. No two of the many rooms were designed alike, and they were all luxuriously furnished mostly with gold and silver. And adjacent to the many rooms were open spaces of green lawns surrounded by columned arcades. There were all kinds of trees along the walkways and these were flanked by watercourses and pools adorned with bronze statues through which water poured out. Josephus said this palace was so wonderful that it almost made the Temple itself seem insignificant.
But there were many marvelous structures that made Jerusalem one of the most beautiful cities on earth — buildings which put ancient Athens, Rome and Alexandria in the shade. Right next to the Temple, Herod built one of the largest citadels in the East. It was described as being more like a sumptuous castle or palace than a fortress. Then there was the amphitheater, which looked much like the later coliseum built in Rome. To this amphitheater were brought many wild animals, great quantities of lions, and other beasts which were rarely seen in the Roman Empire. These beasts fought either one another or men in gladiatorial fights. Herod also built in Jerusalem a Greek theater as well as a hippodrome (where chariot and horse races, gymnastics and athletic events were held in imitation of the Olympic Games). Besides all this and numerous other buildings of elegance, there were public parks, many fountains, pools and extensive gardens found throughout Jerusalem.
On the cultural side, Herod surrounded himself with a circle of men accomplished in Greek literature and art. The highest offices of state were entrusted to Greek rhetoricians. Scholars and professional men came from all over the Empire to take advantage of Herod's generosity in the liberal arts and natural sciences. Herod was so infatuated by the Greek way of life that he even boasted of being more nearly related to the Greeks than to the Jews.
In short, there was hardly a Hellenistic city anywhere in the world that could compare in grandeur to the city of Jerusalem in the time of Jesus.
Herod's Other Achievements
The Holy Land was dotted with cities and towns based on Greek architectural designs. Herod beautified a new Jericho — constructing in the city a palace and a fortress. He also gave the inhabitants a theater, amphitheater and hippodrome, plus a good number of public buildings. At Paneum, near the source of the Jordan River (the Caesarea Philippi of the New Testament), he constructed a great temple to Caesar of the finest stones available. Then about 10 miles south of Jerusalem he raised up an artificial mountain more than 300 feet high and on top constructed a fortress so magnificent that it is described as being more of a palace than a citadel. He also fortified lavishly the famous Masada, and sites east of Jordan.
But even these things did not contain Herod's ambitions for building. Selecting a spot on the Mediterranean Sea where there was a small town in the state of decay, he decided to build — with tremendous natural odds against him — a brand new city and harbor. Spending a vast amount of money, he first lowered into the water gigantic rectangular stones to form a breakwater. Most of the stones were 50 feet long, 9 feet deep and 10 feet broad. Beginning from the shore he continued this breakwater out into the Mediterranean in a circular fashion until some of the stones were being lowered into 120 feet of water. After bringing this breakwater to the surface, he then built a mole on top which was 200 feet wide. On this were erected many buildings for seamen and fishermen. Opposite this artificial harbor which he had now created, he built a temple to Caesar with a statue of the emperor so large (it was over 40 feet high) that it matched the Olympian Zeus — one of the Seven Wonders of the World. The rest of the buildings and statues of this new city were of the largest scale — many other works in the Roman Empire being dwarfed by comparison. Because this new city was one of the greatest creations of the time, Herod named it after Caesar, calling it Caesarea. The city is mentioned in Acts 10:1.
This, however, was not all. The old city of Samaria in the hill country of Ephraim was completely reconstructed on a scale almost equaling Caesarea. Herod also built two complete cities near Jericho. Then he rebuilt the coastal city of Anthedon, which had been destroyed in war, with his customary grandeur. And we must not forget the great commercial city of Antipatris which he raised up in the Plains of Sharon.
Herod's close friendship with Caesar Augustus, the Roman emperor, gave him many natural advantages needed to undertake these magnificent building projects. And to show his thankfulness to Caesar, Josephus says,
I cannot think of any suitable spot in his kingdom that he left without some tribute of esteem for Caesar. When he had filled his own country with temples, these tributes overflowed into his provinces, and in city after city he erected a Caesareum (a temple to Caesar) (Wars, I, 21, 1-8).
But there was more. Not only were Herod's provinces so rich that he made his kingdom the showplace of the world, he also showered his generosity on many far-flung cities and areas.
For Tripolis, Damascus, and Ptolemais he provided gymnasia, for Byblus a wall, for Beirut and Tyre, halls, colonnades, temples, and marketplaces, for Sidon and Damascus theaters, for the coastal Laodicea an aqueduct, for Ascalon baths, magnificent fountains, and cloistered quadrangles remarkable for both scale and craftsmanship; in other places he dedicated woods and parks. . . . Corn he bestowed on all who needed it. To Rhodes he over and over again gave money for naval construction, and when the temple of Apollo was burnt down he rebuilt it with new splendor out of his own purse. What need be said of his gifts to Lycia or Samos, or of his liberality to the whole of Ionia [this means the cities of Ephesus, Smyrna, Troas, etc.), sufficient for the needs of each locality? Even Athens and Sparta, Nicopolis and Mysian Pergamus are full of Herod's offerings, are they not? (ibid., para. 11)
And then, as though this were not enough, he was able to help one of the greatest cities of the East — Antioch. That city did not have enough money to pave even its principal street. But what did Herod do? He paved 2¼ miles of it with the finest polished stone available. And to secure his fame in that city he built an arcade over the street supported by sumptuous Corinthian columns from end to end. This was to keep the rain off the people using this creation of Herod's.
And when the Olympic Games in Greece were in danger of ceasing because of a lack of funds, Herod donated such a gift of money for their upkeep that the committee made him president of the Games. And to perpetuate the memory of this honor, he "endowed them for all time with an income big enough to ensure that this presidency would never be forgotten" (ibid.).
To sum up, Josephus says:
As for his other benefits [to various nations], it is impossible to reckon them up, those which he bestowed on cities, both in Syria and Greece, and in all the places he came to in his voyages (Antiquities, XVI, 5, 3).
There can be no doubt, Herod's kingdom was one of the richest in the Roman Empire. As Josephus said, the Holy Land had reached "the summit of prosperity."
The Roman-Jewish War Ended It All
This land in the time of Christ was the jewel of the East. Its buildings were so beautiful, its fortresses so strong, its financial capacity so great, that no one would have imagined that all of it would be reduced to ashes and complete ruin within a generation.
But there was someone who knew. That person was Jesus Christ!
Not long before His crucifixion, Jesus climbed to the summit of the Mount of Olives overlooking Jerusalem on the east. When His disciples called attention to the grandeur of the Temple and the city, He answered, "Seest thou these great buildings? There shall not be left one stone upon another that shall not be thrown down" (Mark 13:2).
Who could have believed such a prophecy? The most prosperous area in the Empire being reduced to oblivion? This seemed absurd and beyond belief! But this is what Christ prophesied, and within a generation it had come true — so true. Christ had said that "when ye shall see Jerusalem compassed with armies, then know that the DESOLATION thereof is nigh" (Luke 21:20).
When the Jews revolted against the Romans, the Roman armies surrounded the city, but then, for some unknown reason, suddenly retreated. This gave the followers of Christ a chance to heed His command to flee the city. But who could have believed that Jerusalem's desolation was nigh at hand, except those who trusted in the prophecy of Christ? Within months it was all over — the once beautiful Jerusalem and Judaea, the pride of the world, lay in utter desolation. Listen to Josephus' melancholy description of Judaea and Jerusalem after the war was over:
The countryside like the City was a pitiful sight; for where once there had been a lovely vista of woods and parks there was now nothing but DESERT and the stumps of trees. No one — not even a foreigner —who had seen the old Judaea and the glorious suburbs of the City, and now set his eyes on her present desolation, could have helped sighing and groaning at so terrible a change; for every trace of beauty had been blotted out by the war, and nobody who had known it in the past and came upon it suddenly would have recognized the place (Wars, VI, 1, 1).
The Romans took away to various parts of the Empire much of the remaining people and also carted away many of the beautiful stones and other fineries that made up this once-glorious land. It has been said that if the ruins of these Herodian cities, buildings and temples had been left rather than taken away, classical admirers would not be going to Greece or Western Asia Minor to see the remains of the Hellenistic world. They would be coming to Jerusalem and the surrounding area. But almost all of it was taken away over the decades that followed the disastrous Roman-Jewish War. And of the Temple building itself, not one stone remains upon another. With that war, the external splendor of the Holy Land — a glory that approached that of Solomon's, completely disappeared. The Roman-Jewish War began its decline. The wars that came in its wake, over the centuries, have further reduced it to the state that it is in now. But has his glorious land of Christ's time with is beauty and prosperity been banished forever?
Restoration Prophesied
The time is soon coming when the Holy Land will regain its prosperity — and even on a grander scale than the times of Solomon and Herod put together! The prophet Joel said that the Lord will "be jealous for his land, and pity his people. . . . I will send you corn, and wine, and oil, and ye shall be satisfied therewith . . . for the pastures of the wilderness do spring, for the tree beareth her fruit, the fig tree and the vine do yield their strength . . . the floors shall be full of wheat, and the vats shall overflow with wine and oil . . . ye shall eat in plenty, and be satisfied, and praise the name of the Lord your God, that hath dealt wondrously with you. . . . And it shall come to pass in that day, that the mountains shall drop down new wine, and the hills shall Flow with milk, and all the rivers of Judah shall flow with waters" (Joel 2:18, 19, 22, 24, 26; 3:18).
A start in this direction is already being made. Reforestation has started in many areas. Cities are becoming more modern and areas are being cleaned up and beautified. Even the Hebrew University and Ambassador College archaeological dig is helping to clear the debris that has covered Zion for the past nineteen hundred years. God has started the rejuvenation already. Yet the complete fulfillment of Joel's prophecy will come when Gods' true Messiah, Jesus Christ, returns to this earth. This is when the area will return to its pristine glory — becoming again a land of milk and honey, the true Promised Land of God. It will then become the center of the earth — politically, culturally, economically and spiritually. The glory of the Holy Land will return, but on a much grander scale. God speed that day.