Chapter 10. Jeroboam of Israel and Jonah the prophet. Uzziah's misfortune, (leprosy), for usurpin... (Book 9. From the death of Ahab until the Captivity of the Ten Tribes) (Antiquities of the Jews) (Flavius Josephus)
Chapter 10. Jeroboam of Israel and Jonah the prophet. Uzziah's misfortune, (leprosy), for usurpin... (Book 9. From the death of Ahab until the Captivity of the Ten Tribes) (Antiquities of the Jews) (Flavius Josephus) somebodyChapter 10. Jeroboam of Israel and Jonah the prophet. Uzziah's misfortune, (leprosy), for usurping the priestly role | ||||
1. IN the fifteenth year of the reign of Amaziah, Jeroboam the son of Joash reigned over Israel in Samaria forty years. This king was guilty of scorn against God, and became very wicked in worshipping of idols and in many undertakings that were absurd and foreign. He was also the cause of ten thousand misfortunes to the people of Israel. Now one Jonah, a prophet, foretold to him that he should make war with the Syrians and conquer their army and enlarge the bounds of his kingdom on the northern parts to the city Hamath and on the southern to the lake Asphaltitis; for the bounds of the Canaanites originally were these, as Joshua their general had determined them. So Jeroboam made an expedition against the Syrians and overran all their country, as Jonah had foretold. | ||||
2. Now I cannot but think it necessary for me, who have promised to give an accurate account of our affairs, to describe the actions of this prophet, so far as I have found them written down in the Hebrew books. Jonah had been commanded by God to go to the kingdom of Nineveh; and when he was there, to publish it in that city, how it should lose the dominion it had over the nations. But he went not, out of fear; indeed he ran away from God to the city of Joppa and finding a ship there, he went into it and sailed to Tarsus, in Cilicia and upon the rise of a most terrible storm, which was so great that the ship was in danger of sinking, the mariners, the master and the pilot himself, made prayers and vows, in case they escaped the sea: but Jonah lay still and covered [in the ship,] without imitating anything that the others did; but as the waves grew greater and the sea became more violent by the winds, they suspected, as is usual in such cases, that some one of the persons that sailed with them was the occasion of this storm and agreed to discover by lot which of them it was. | ||||
3. When Jeroboam the king had passed his life in great happiness and had ruled forty years, he died and was buried in Samaria and his son Zachariah took the kingdom. After the same manner did Uzziah, the son of Amaziah, begin to reign over the two tribes in Jerusalem, in the fourteenth year of the reign of Jeroboam. He was born of Jecoliah, his mother, who was a citizen of Jerusalem. He was a good man and by nature righteous and magnanimous and very laborious in taking care of the affairs of his kingdom. He made an expedition also against the Philistines and overcame them in battle and took the cities of Gath and Jabneh and brake down their walls; after which expedition he assaulted those Arabs that adjoined to Egypt. He also built a city upon the Red Sea and put a garrison into it. He, after this, overthrew the Ammonites and appointed that they should pay tribute. He also overcame all the countries as far as the bounds of Egypt and then began to take care of Jerusalem itself for the rest of his life; for he rebuilt and repaired all those parts of the wall which had either fallen down by length of time, or by the carelessness of the kings, his predecessors, as well as all that part which had been thrown down by the king of Israel, when he took his father Amaziah prisoner and entered with him into the city. | ||||
4. While Uzziah was in this state and making preparation [for futurity], he was corrupted in his mind by pride and became insolent and this on account of that abundance which he had of things that will soon perish and despised that power which is of eternal duration (which consisted in piety towards God and in the observation of the laws); so he fell by occasion of the good success of his affairs and was carried headlong into those sins of his father, which the splendor of that prosperity he enjoyed and the glorious actions he had done, led him into, while he was not able to govern himself well about them. Accordingly, when a remarkable day was come and a general festival was to be celebrated, he put on the holy garment and went into the temple to offer incense to God upon the golden altar, which he was prohibited to do by Azariah the high priest, who had fourscore priests with him and who told him that it was not lawful for him to offer sacrifice and that �none besides the posterity of Aaron were permitted so to do.� and when they cried out that he must go out of the temple and not transgress against God, he was angry at them and threatened to kill them, unless they would hold their peace. | ||||