Paul, Pompeii & the Way: Did God Destroy Pompeii?
Author: Bobby Valentine | Filed under: 1 Corinthians, Acts, Paul, RomansLike many people, I’ve always had a fascination with Pompeii. I’ve read a few books the first was Michael Grant’s Cities of Vesuvius: Pompeii and Herculaneum. Peter Oakes book in 2013 called Reading Romans in Pompeii: Paul’s Letter at Ground Level was a nitty gritty book. While in Italy I worked thru Paul Wilkinson’s Pompeii, An Archeological Guide. Oakes book, the first part, makes much more sense having walked the streets and been on the “insula of Menander” itself.
Pompeii is most famous (seemingly) for two things: 1) having been blown up and 2) erotic frescos. But it has the oldest known depiction of a biblical scene too (see below).
The city is much as it was within the New Testament period and offers some unique opportunities to think about a Pharisee apostle of the Jewish Messiah within a typical pagan Greco-Roman city.
There were Jews in Pompeii. Most were slaves. For instance, we know there was a Jewish slave, a prostitute, named Maria (a name familiar from the NT). Sadly, her name (along with others) was scratched as graffiti on the walls of the Lupanar (Latin for brothel). She did not own her body or self in any sense.
In the House of the Physician there is a fresco depicting the oldest known painting of a biblical scene and it is in Pompeii. It is now called “The Judgement of Solomon” and was excavated in 1841 and is presently located in the Museo Archeologico National Napoli (pic in my album). There is scholarly debate over whether the house belonged to a pagan or Jew, but the majority believe it was a pagan home. Many stories from the Torah were well known in pagan circles since the Septuagint had been translated into Greek. We may recall the apostle James, the Lord’s brother, stating that the Torah of Moses had been preached in all the cities (Acts 15.21).
Some Jews seem to have believed that the destruction of Roman cities of Vesuvius was the wrath of the God of Israel. Normally scholars point to Pliny the Younger as the first description of the destruction of Pompeii/Herculaneum. This is only true of a description of the event. Probably the first known reference to the destruction of Pompeii is in a work called The Sibylline Oracles.
Scholar J. J. Collins, editor and translator of the Oracles, notes that Book 4 dates prior to the first century but was redacted by a Jewish author around AD 80. They Priestess/Prophet’s words are a prophecy “in reverse.” The Jewish author interprets the destruction of Pompeii as God’s wrath upon Rome for the wanton destruction of the Jerusalem Temple nine years before (some think the destruction of Pompeii was on or about on the same day as the destruction of the temple). The text reads,
“An evil storm of war will also come upon Jerusalem
from Italy, and it will sack the great Temple of God …
A leader of Rome [Titus] will come … who will burn
the Temple of Jerusalem with fire [and] at the same time slaughter
many men and destroy the great land of the Jews. …
When a firebrand, turned away from a cleft in the earth [Vesuvius]
in the land of Italy, reaches to broad heaven
it will burn many cities and destroy men.
Much smoking ashes will fill the great sky
and showers will fall from heaven like red earth.
Know then the wrath of the heavenly God.”
(Sibylline Oracles 4.115-135,
see James H. Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol 2, page 387).
Collins notes this is a reference to Vesuvius and Pompeii.
It would appear that another Jew thought the same. At some point, perhaps even during the eruption of Vesuvius someone scratched graffiti upon the wall of House 26, “Sodom Gomorrah.” Most scholars take this to be a Jew writing this with the echo of the fire and death falling up them.
With a nod to earlier in the first century, the great granddaughter of Herod, Julia Drusilla, given the title “Queen” would, along with her son Marcus Antonius Agrippa, die in the volcanic blast of Vesuvius in the city of Pompeii.
A lot is going on in Pompeii. It shows us just how incredibly crowded, noisy, unbelievably filthy, literally awash in sex and paganism the world of Romans, Corinthians, Ephesus, and about half of Acts really was.
Was the destruction of Pompeii, Yahweh’s response to the barbarism of the Temple in AD 70. One Jew thought so and another seems to say Amen. I don’t really know but what is interesting to me is that the world of Pompeii was the world a Pharisee had to negotiate when talking to Gentiles (the Greek word for Gentile is the same as for pagan just an FYI) in his world. Tomorrow I will think about how that world my provoke a response like that in the Wisdom of Solomon and the Epistle to the Romans. Paul, btw, has the same opinion as the sage of the Wisdom of Solomon.









