Selasa, 11 Januari 2011

Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?,

Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

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Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim



Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

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What ‘Really’ Happened? History’s most impacting century remains its most miss-represented. A new appraisal based on suppressed archives assesses a long due varied consideration of this history. Rome’s war with the Jews was neither about power nor terrain; nor even against the Jews per se who otherwise held prominent positions in Rome’s institutions. Rome allowed freedom of belief to all her conquered nations, acquiring a plethora of deities for worship; Rome accumulated 400 Gods. Yet this war was different from all other wars. The Jews would not ‘do as the Romans do’ - they followed laws that Rome called as the Hebrew sorcery: “So you are the only people who reject my divinity!” – Caligula, 37 AD/CE. “Gods are Gods - What difference which one!” – Vespasian, 68 AD/CE. This was a Holy War. It turned history and humanity as no other. Rome’s greatest weapon, more so than her military might, was her par excellence in guile and propaganda. Rome allowed no adverse reporting, scrutinizing all writings and killing any who dared her, including prominent Roman philosophers such as Helvidius Priscus. It is why we have a total absence of any Hebrew or Christian writing evidences from the first two centuries. The Dead Sea Scrolls were saved under extraordinary means and became the sole authentic manuscript of this period; all else is questioned by historians. Here, who won this war, Rome or the Jews, becomes conditional to the question being a retrospective or contemporaneous one. It was a time when Christianity was yet not a religion and Islam centuries away. Here, history itself tilted and the un-expected happened; the victor became vanquished and the utterly vanquished prevailed. According to the Roman archives, Mighty Rome’s victory was shrouded in latent defeat, with the Jews’ “No Surrender’ to the last man and woman on Masada: “And it seemed to everybody and especially to them that so far from being destruction, it was victory and salvation and happiness to the Jews that they perished along with the Temple.” – So writes Rome’s most prominent philosopher, Deo Cassius. Vespasian will throw down his victory crown in the Coliseum celebrations; 10,000 Romans will turn sides. Thereafter, the divine emperor realm itself came to a close, conquered by a new religion that became history’s biggest and most successful one. Christianity emerged as a Monotheist belief when this was least plausible, emerging out of the belly of anti-Monotheistic Rome. Christianity was born out of it: “Jesus spoke Hebrew, wore Tassels, preached only to Jews, performed sacrifices and had Hebrew writings on his cross” (Acts 26:14). "Without Judaism there would be no Christianity, and only with Judaism has Christianity a relationship with origin." – (Hans Kung.) Rome’s war with the Jews began with the Greek Empire in 300 BCE. Alexander, the devoted pupil of Aristotle, enters the Jerusalem Temple with a strange request to the temple priests: “Translate for me your Torah in the Greek tongue.” "One of the most important events in history. If the Temple might still be standing today, history would be inconceivably different." (Moses Hess; "Rome & Jerusalem")

Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8508716 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-09-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.00" h x .72" w x 8.00" l, 1.40 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 318 pages
Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

About the Author About. As a documentary film writer for 25 years I produced a diverse range of subjects such as Making Movies, W.W.II: The Frank Capra Documents, Deep Space Encounters and biographical films of The Beatles and James Dean. The first century History has always been an underlying intrigue throughout. I took actual historical archives and biblical verses and re-enacted them for today's audiences - to transport, to ‘beam you’ back to that arena and time. It all began with the Queen Berenice’s enigmatic final retort to Titus, exposing a hidden core of spirituality in this infamous harlot: “What did you think this war was really all about, my brave mighty warrior?” Thereafter it became complicated. The results are sometimes unconventional, but I believe, historically faithful. What do you think this war was really all about? - Joseph Shellim.


Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

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Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The war scenes are excellent and breath taking By nathan nathan Having read this book made me realize that before Christianity happened as a religion, the Jews stood up to defend their right of belief against Rome's decrees. The Jews battled to the very end to uphold their religious beliefs and laws. The war scenes are excellent and breath taking. So is the love between a Roman and a Jew - I held my breath to the end. This is an excellent book covering the first century, this should be in every library, school and book outlet so people can understand the events of this history. It us very relevant and impacts today's events. This is a rare insight with brilliant research by the author. It is a true account that most people are unaware of in today's times.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. INFORMATIVE, THRILLING AND THOUGHT PROVOKING ! By Kristin 5.0 out of 5 starsThis book is informative, riveting , powerful and commanding. I could not 'put it down ' to take a breath!The way the author captures the bare, naked reality of the historical scenario, which incorporates the Fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple by the Roman General Titus, in AD 70, is breathtakingly awesome.It is so horrifyingly real in parts , as to almost transport the reader into Rome's ' glorious' dark past which impacted Israel's most devastating tragedy and moved me to tears.I was totally engrossed from the opening scenario, which captures the senses in an almost tangible way, as the underlying specifics energise the setting re 'food dropping from the upper levels' in the colisseum sequence .... ' the spontaneous crying of a frightened Roman child' .... 'Titus vomiting on the side lines ' etc.The depraved aspect of ancient Rome's culture , energized by the perception of its gods, expressed in power lust, cruel blood lust, perverted sadism and sexual immorality, permeates the frenzied ambience accompanying the merciless plight of the caged captives, as the poignant , secretive birth of the baby, with his implied Hebrew / Roman identity, occurs in horrendous conditions of enslaved captivity, which is at once heartrending and utterly captivating.Typically true to both form and fact, the fascination of Titus for Bernice appears to be based on lustful desire and not love.This came across in the choice of words between them - it is a distinct contrast to the dialogue between Deborah Hur and her passionate Roman lover, Alexis, the ' Forbidden Love' that is at the centre of the story.The 'Enigmatic Man' scene projects an impacting conclusion , reminiscent of the Biblical text, 'Yeshua wept '/ ' Jesus wept' .The silent, observing figure of the 'Enigmatic Man' poignantly portrays the depth of Godly sorrow [ I cried !] over the devastating scene before His eyes . YET the implication strongly and convincingly comes across that - 'He is there' - and because of that, this is not the demise of the Hebrew Nation, nor the end of the Israelites.God's Promise to Abraham & His offspring is irrevocable. The Messiah will return for the salvation of Israel.Deborah's words echo this prophetic truth ~ 'Jerusalem will rise when Rome is dust'.The survival of the baby son of Alexis and Deborah , the seed, as the book referred to him, carries the conviction that God's redemptive purpose with Israel is eternal and highlights the implication that the ' Blessing of the Covenant' is extended to the Gentiles, as vividly portrayed in the forbidden love relationship between a Hebrew woman and a Roman man .I extend my congratulations to the author for this worthy and commendable work !Joseph D. Shellim is a talented researcher and gifted writer, who has authored an excellent book, which is historically informative within the framework of a gripping and absorbing story that is also spiritually thought provoking.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. INFORMATIVE, THRILLING AND THOUGHT PROVOKING By Kristin This book is informative, riveting , powerful and commanding. I could not 'put it down ' to take a breath!The way the author captures the bare, naked reality of the historical scenario, which incorporates the Fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple by the Roman General Titus, in AD 70, is breathtakingly awesome. It is so horrifyingly real in parts , as to almost transport the reader into Rome's ' glorious' dark past which impacted Israel's most devastating tragedy and moved me to tears.I was totally engrossed from the opening scenario, which captures the senses in an almost tangible way, as the underlying specifics energise the setting re 'food dropping from the upper levels' in the colisseum sequence .... ' the spontaneous crying of a frightened Roman child' .... 'Titus vomiting on the side lines ' etc.The depraved aspect of ancient Rome's culture , energized by the perception of its gods, expressed in power lust, cruel blood lust, perverted sadism and sexual immorality, permeates the frenzied ambience accompanying the merciless plight of the caged captives, as the poignant , secretive birth of the baby, with his implied Hebrew / Roman identity, occurs in horrendous conditions of enslaved captivity, which is at once heartrending and utterly captivating.Typically true to both form and fact, the fascination of Titus for Bernice appears to be based on lustful desire and not love.This came across in the choice of words between them - it is a distinct contrast to the dialogue between Deborah Hur and her passionate Roman lover, Alexis, the ' Forbidden Love' that is at the centre of the story.The 'Enigmatic Man' scene projects an impacting conclusion , reminiscent of the Biblical text, 'Yeshua wept '/ ' Jesus wept' .The silent, observing figure of the 'Enigmatic Man' poignantly portrays the depth of Godly sorrow [ I cried !] over the devastating scene before His eyes . YET the implication strongly and convincingly comes across that - 'He is there' - and because of that, this is not the demise of the Hebrew Nation, nor the end of the Israelites.God's Promise to Abraham & His offspring is irrevocable. The Messiah will return for the salvation of Israel.Deborah's words echo this prophetic truth ~ 'Jerusalem will rise when Rome is dust'.The survival of the baby son of Alexis and Deborah , the seed, as the book referred to him, carries the conviction that God's redemptive purpose with Israel is eternal and highlights the implication that the ' Blessing of the Covenant' is extended to the Gentiles, as vividly portrayed in the forbidden love relationship between a Hebrew woman and a Roman man .I extend my congratulations to the author for this worthy and commendable work !Joseph D. Shellim is a talented researcher and gifted writer, who has authored an excellent book, which is historically informative within the framework of a gripping and absorbing story that is also spiritually thought provoking.

See all 8 customer reviews... Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim


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Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim
Ben Hur II - Exile [Library Edition]: What 'Really' Happened in the First Century?, by Joseph D. Shellim

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