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Regular Convocation of Couchiching Chapter No. 198 Orillia, ON

antefixus having just had my RAM degree, with Right Excellent Companion Brian Aikins and Mike Beuthling, Zerubbabel of Phoenix Chapter 34. Unfortunately I was only able to get photographs of two of the six candidates.

 

ZERUBBABEL: WHO WAS HE?

 

All Royal Arch Masons recognize the important role Zerubbabel plays in our ritual, but most of us (including the author) know very little about the man himself. We know our Chapters are "erected to God and dedicated to Zerubbabel" - but who was this man? Unfortunately, the Holy Bible provides scant information about the builder of the Second Temple. What little that is known, taken from our Volume of Sacred Law, is summarized in the following paragraphs.

 

The Temple that Zerubbabel built in Jerusalem in the sixth century BCE lasted longer than the Temples of Solomon and Herod the Great combined. However, Zerubbabel disappears from the Biblical narrative even before the Second Temple is dedicated. This has fuelled speculation by leading theologians and Biblical scholars that he was possibly executed for leading a messianic movement that would have crowned him king of an independent Jewish nation.

 

The prophets of his day certainly seemed to have messianic expectations of Zerubbabel as a direct descendant of King David. Haggai said the Jew who helped lead the first wave of his people home from exile in Babylon would be used by Yahweh to destroy other nations: "On that day, says the Lord of hosts, I will take you, a Zerubbabel to be my servant, the son of Shealtiel, says the Lord, and make you like a signet ring; for I have chosen you, says the Lord of hosts" (Haggai 2:23). The words "servant," "signet ring," and "chosen" indicate that Zerubbabel was most likely born during Judah's five-decade exile in Babylon. In fact, the name Zerubbabel itself means "seed of Babylon."

 

Though many leading citizens of Judah were exiled in 597 BCE, most were not taken until Babylon levelled Jerusalem in 587 BCE. Forty-seven years later, the Persians captured Babylon, and, within a year, the Persian king Cyrus II issued a decree allowing the Jews to return home to "rebuild the house of the Lord, the God of Israel" (Ezra 1 :3). Cyrus also restored the Temple's treasures the Babylonians had stolen and agreed to help finance the building project.

 

The decree of 538 BCE was not unique. Cyrus, like Persian kings after him, had a policy of allowing captured people to return home and encouraged their native religions. Ancient non-Biblical sources show that Cyrus also gave money to rebuild temples in Ur and Uruk. Cambyses II, his son and successor, helped finance restoration of the temple at Sais, Egypt. And, Darius I, who succeeded Cambyses, won over the priests of Egypt by rebuilding their temple and restoring their incomes.

 

Zerubbabel was placed in charge of the returning Jews and given the title "governor of Judah." He allowed the people about 14 months to get settled, build their homes and plant crops. Then, about 536 BCE, the Jews began in earnest to rebuild the Temple. Sometime after they laid the foundation over what is purported to have been Solomon's Temple, opposition arose that slowed the work and finally brought the construction to a 15-year halt. The opposition came from non-Jews in the region, perhaps descendants of settlers the Assyrians had brought in after they crushed the northern king- dom of Israel in 721 BCE as Samaritans living in the area who saw the resurgence of Judah as a political and military threat. Some of those people worshipped Yahweh and asked to help in the building of the Temple. The response of Zerubbabel and the other leaders was blunt: "You have nothing to do with us in building a house to our God; just we alone will build to the Lord, the God of Israel, as King Cyrus the king of Persia has commanded us" (Ezra 4:3). In retaliation, the neighbours harassed the builders to the point of bringing the work to a standstill, where it remained throughout the reign of Cyrus as well as that of this son Cambyses. I

 

According to another school of thought, Sheshbazzar, possibly! Zerubbabel's uncle and then governor of Judah, led the first returnees in the construction of the Temple. Zerubbabel himself did not arrive until about 521 BCE to oversee the second phase of building.

 

A year and a half into the reign of the Persian king, Darius, the prophets Haggai and Zechariah convinced Zerubbabel that it was time to finish the job. Haggai told Zerubbabel, then the governor of Judah, and Joshua, the High Priest, that the reason for the people's inadequate harvests, their hunger, thirst and cold was that Yahweh was displeased with them for failing to restore His Holy House (Haggai 1 :4).

 

The Jews resumed construction again "on the twenty-fourth day of the month, in the sixth month" (Haggai 1: 15). Once again, neighbouring communities took notice of the project and raised objections, this time expressed to the governor of Syria. He asked who authorized the work. When Zerubbabel and the other Jewish leaders told him the Persians, the Syrian governor wrote to Darius asking him to confirm it by checking the royal archives.

 

Darius ordered the royal archives to be searched and found the decree of Cyrus. Then, he not only confirmed what the Jews had said, he ordered the non-Jews to leave the Jews alone and to give them any money from the royal revenues or supplies they needed to complete the Temple. If anyone did not comply, Darius said, "a beam is to be pulled out of his house, and he shall be impaled upon if' (Ezra 6: 11).

 

In a subsequent prophecy, Haggai promised that the Second Temple would surpass Solomon's magnificent edifice in splendour as well as being filled with silver and gold. This was not to be.

 

According to some sources, Zerubbabel's Temple was completed in 516 BCE, about three and a half years after the second effort began. Contrary to ancient legends, Zerubbabel never served as King of Judah. Zerubbabel, presumably the leader of the project, is nowhere mentioned in the details of the Temple's completion and dedication. He disappears from the Bible, except for three New Testament verses that include him in the genealogy of the Christian Master. Yet, this may mean nothing more than that his most memorable contribution to ancient Jewish history had been already recorded, and there was nothing significant left to be recorded.

 

Phil Elam, PHI? Keystone Chapter No. 146

Page 269 - Royal Arch Mason Spring 2002

 

Zerubbabel - Who was he?

 

When the Assyrian Empire gave way to the rising Babylonian power, the Western Provinces and Vassal States were then absorbed by the new power, after an interval of Egyptian domination, The Babylonians soon encountered rebellion in the Kingdom of Judah, and in 597 BC King Jehoiachin and many of his people were carried off to Babylonia by Nebuchadnezzar. The Kingdom of Judah, however, was permitted to live and Zedhiah, another Davidic prince, was placed upon the throne by the Babylonians. With in a decade he too, rebelled, and on this occasion the Babylonians besieged, and captured and burned Jerusalem and the Temple, in 587 3 C They carried off to Babylonia what remained of the royal family, the leading priests and the aristocracy, also those with various skills, leaving behind those whom they classed, as our ritual states, “menials”.

 

In the year 538 BC, after forty-eight years of captivity in Babylonia, King Cyrus of Persia, after conquering Babylonia, issued a proclamation allowing all peoples held captive, of all races, to return to their homeland, if they were willing to do so. The proclamation also stated that all temples and shrines destroyed by the Babylonians, would be restored, and the cost would be paid from the Persian Royal Treasury, The captive Jews took advantage of the proclamation to return to their native land and to rebuild the “House of the Lord”. Not all Jews returned to their homeland, many thousands had prospered, and elected to stay in Babylonia.

 

The first contingent of Israelites who took advantage of the proclamation, and rid themselves of the humility of captivity, started on their journey to Jerusalem in the year 538 BC, under the leadership of Sheshbazzar, He was not a Persian from King Cyrus’s staff, nor a Babylonian in spite of his Babylonian name, He is to be identified with the Shenazzar, who in 1st Chronicles 3; 17, appears as the fourth son of King Jehoiachin Sheshbazzar was the oldest surviving representative of the royal line of David, and bore the title “Prince of Judah”. King Cyrus appointed Sheshbazzar governor of Judah, to supervise the conditions of the “Royal Decree”.

 

The fate of Sheshbazzar’s expedition is unknown, Sheshbazzar disappeared. Whether he ever reached Jerusalem, with or without the temple vessels, can only be guessed at. It is possible that they found the difficulty of establishing their colony so great that it taxed all their resources. They may have attempted to clear away the debris from the site of the ruined temple, and set up an altar for sacrifices, but the building of a new structure was postponed for many years, until reinforcements from Babylon and a more certain prosperity would make lt possible.

 

In the year 520 BC, King Darius of Persia, gave permission to ZERUBBABEL to lead the second large contingent of Israelites to Jerusalem, to rebuild the city and temple. ZERUBBABEL was the son of Pedaiah, his mother was Shealtiel. He was the grandson of King Jehoiachin, the last independent King of Judah, who was carried away captive to Babylonia, in the year 597 BC ZERUBBABEL was the ninth direct generation descendent of King David. He was born in Babylonia, during the Babylonian captivity, between the years 597 and 538 BC, probably around 560 BC, as he was referred to as the young “Prince of the People” when he returned to Jerusalem.

 

In the Roman Catholic Douail-Reims Bible, in the first book of Esdras, it states as follows: “In the year 520 B C., a large contingent of Babylonian Jews to Jerusalem took place, under a certain ZERUBBABEL, who had won the favour of King Darius, the Persian King, were permitted to leave Babylonia, these consisted of the following heads of the fathers’ houses according to their tribes were chosen to go up, with their wives and sons and daughters and their men-servants and maid-servants and their cattle. And King Darius sent with them one thousand horsemen to conduct them safely to Jerusalem. And these are the names of the men who went up according to the families by tribes, and the order of their divisions, the priests, sons of Phineas, so of Aaron, JESHUA, son of Johozadak, son of Seraiah. Then rose Zerubbabel son of Shealtiel, of the house of David, of .the line of Phares, of the tribes of Judah, who spoke to King Darius, the King of Persia, wise words in the second year of his reign, in the first month.”

 

Zerubbabel was a cousin of Sheshbazzar. At Sheshbazzar’s death the youthful Zerubbabel succeeded him as the ranking member of the royal line, in Jewish eyes. King Darius, in accordance with the provincial policy of King Cyrus, appointed Zerubbabel to the position of governor of Jerusalem in the year 520 BC

 

On Zerrubabel’s arrival at Jerusalem, he and JESHUA, the son of Johozadak, the High Priest and the scribe Shinshai (Ezra 4; 8), began preparations for the rebuilding of the ruined temple. The examination, plans to be arrived at, and numerous details to be taken into consideration for an undertaking of this size was considerable. The actual start of the restoration began in the second year of their arrival, in 518 BC

 

An altar for burnt offerings was no doubt built on the site of the ruined temple, but not by Zerubbabel or JESHUA, as late as 520 BC, Perhaps it was erected during the period of the captivity by Jehovah worshippers who remained in the land during the captivity. If not by them, it’s erection would be the first concern of Sheshbazzar’s party. They must have had some easily built centre of worship, in lieu of the temple which they had planned to reconstruct.

 

A great effort was needed to overcome the inertia arising from many years of postponement, and the discouraging conditions which met the new arrivals in Zerubbabel’s party. Not long after Zerubbabel’s arrival, he instigated a revolt, to have himself Placed upon the throne of David, and to overthrow the Persian overlords. This indeed strange action, when you consider that the “Decree” of King Cyrus, and the policy continued by King Darius, included that the expense of restoring the “House of the Lord”, was to be paid out of the Persian royal treasury, Personal ambitions by Zerubbabel, is the only answer to this insane action, as he could not, by any stretch of the imagination hope to defeat the mighty Persian Empire, with his small colony of Israelites, The rebellion collapsed.

 

Zerubbabel was removed from his position as governor of Jerusalem, King Darius may have feared the effort of having a descendent of the old Dravidic line as governor of Jerusalem, He suddenly disappears from Biblical history, It is believed by most Biblical scholars that he was executed after being tried at Byblas, and went to his grave without ever having sat on the throne of his forefathers, No descendent of David has ever occupied that throne after the fall of the dynasty in 587 BC

 

Zerrubable will only be remembered as having led the second large contingent of Jews from Babylonia to Jerusalem, and that he was present at the start of the restoration of the temple.

 

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