-
Simon The Zealot Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 18, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Under different circumstances Simon would run a blade through Matthew, and Matthew would live in fear of Simon, but Jesus makes them partners in the Gospel. A left-winger and a right-winger united in Christ.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next
We want to look at an Apostle of whom we would know
nothing if the New Testament did not tell us of his political
affiliation before he became a believer. If a man was called Simon
the Democrat or Simon the Republican, you would not be able to
draw many conclusions about him because these terms are too
general. But if he was called Simon the Communist you would be
able to say much more about him, for they have a more specific
philosophy. So it is with the name Simon the Zealot. The Zealots
were a political party in Israel with a very clear cut philosophy,
and a program to carry it out.
Since the New Testament tells us nothing of Simon but the fact
that he was a member of this party, everything we can learn about
him must come as inferences from what we know of the party.
Simon the Zealot is as obscure as Simon Peter is famous. We
know nothing about the Apostle Peter's political background, but
that is all we know of Simon the Zealot. The Zealots were radical
and fanatical nationalists who mixed their religion and politics
into one of the most potent mixtures history has ever seen.
The land of Palestine was a country under Roman rule. None
of the Jews liked it, but some hated it, and they wanted to fight
this master that had them in its grip. Herod the Great was able to
keep the volcano of their wrath from erupting by skilled
diplomacy and sheer power of personality. But when he died in 4
B. C. and the territory was divided between his three sons, things
began to get hot. In 7 A. D. a leader rose up in Galilee where the
blaze was hottest. Judas the Galilean led an insurrection. They
stormed the palace and broke into the arsenal, and embarked on a
revolution as armed rebels.
Judas and his men were no match for the power of Rome,
however, and he was crushed. In Acts 5:37 Gamaliel tells us of his
fate. "Judas the Galilean arose in the days of the census and drew
away some of the people after him; he also perished, and all who
followed him were scattered." Judas did not get far, but he
started something which gave rise to the party called the Zealots.
These fanatical nationalists loved their country more than life
itself, and they hated Rome with all the hatred the human heart
can possess. Such passion of love and hate when mixed lead to
zeal bordering on madness. Nothing was permitted to stand in
their way. Murder was not only permitted, it was promoted.
They became known as the assassins. The name Sicarii came from
the Sica, the little curved sword which they carried below their
robes, and which they plunged into their enemies at every possible
opportunity. They were ruthless, and they were hunted down by the
Romans and killed, but their zeal was so great that they did not
fear what the Romans could do to them. Josephus wrote, "The
Zealots have an inviolable attachment to liberty, and say that God
is the only Ruler and Lord. They do not mind dying any kind of
death, nor do they heed the torture of their kindred and their
friends, nor can any such fear make them call any man lord."
This zeal and loyalty and love for country were all qualities to be
admired, but their hate for Rome spoiled these values. Hatred,
however good the basis for it, destroys the hater. The Zealots did
not destroy Rome, but they destroyed their own nation.
Fanaticism is self-destructive. They so hated Rome that they
became suspicious of all who did not hate Rome with their zeal.
They began to look upon Jews who paid taxes to Rome as
compromisers and enemies of Israel.
Their battle cry was, "No Lord but Jehovah, no tax but the
temple tax, no friend but the Zealot." Everyone who was not with
them was against them, and so they began to turn upon their own
countrymen. Any Jew who entered into an agreement with the
Romans was marked for assassination. The country homes of rich
Saducees were burned and the people were terrorized. Four sons
of Judas the Galilean continued gorilla warfare until they were
killed. A grandson was still at it with no lag in zeal.
When he and his 900 men were trapped by the Romans he
ordered them to destroy themselves with fire so the Romans
would have nothing but ashes for their victory. This fanaticism
finally led to complete self-destruction of the Zealots and of the
Jewish state. In 70 A. D. the Romans surrounded Jerusalem for a
final showdown with the Jews. The people were starving, and
were in a hopeless situation. The Zealots were so crazed with hate