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MAX KLEIN BIBLE MINISTRIES

Diaspora

Written by: Max Klein

Greek word that means “scattering” or “dispersion,” used theologically for the scattering of the Jews outside their homeland. The primary cause of the diaspora is divine discipline upon client nation Israel.

 

Dispersion of the Jews began in 721 B.C., when the apostate Northern Kingdom surrendered to Assyrian forces and the conquered Jews were taken as slaves to eastern Assyrian provinces (2 Kings 17:5–12, 20–23; Jer. 50:17a). Over one hundred years later, the Southern Kingdom (Judah) similarly ignored the prophets’ warnings against idolatry and fell to Nebuchadnezzar of Chaldea. Through three invasions (606–586 B.C.), Judah’s population was exiled in the Chaldean Empire, which later fell to Persia (2 Kings 25:1–6; Jer. 3:8; 17:1–13; 25:11; 50:17b). While many Jews returned to the Land when Judah was finally restored (2 Chron. 36:22–23; Jer. 29:10; cf. Ezra 1:1–3), thousands chose to remain in Persia and from there wandered into other parts of the world.

 

Further dispersion occurred in 332 B.C., when Alexander the Great carried off Jews to administer his far-flung Graeco-Macedonian Empire. And in 63 B.C., Pompey’s conquest of Jerusalem left another portion of Jews in Roman captivity.

 

The extent of the diaspora as of the mid-first century A.D. is confirmed in the New Testament. On the day of Pentecost A.D. 30, Jews visited Jerusalem from “every nation under heaven,” speaking a multitude of languages from the many regions of Egypt, Parthia, and Asia Minor (Acts 2:5–11). Reports of synagogues in Thessalonica, Berea, Athens, and Corinth (Acts 17:1, 10, 16–17; 18:1–8; cf. James 1:1) further illustrate the dispersion established throughout the previous centuries, a condition exacerbated by the persecution of believing Jews in Jerusalem (Acts 8:1).

 

The final increment of dispersion, the culminating discipline to apostate Israel who rejected the incarnate Christ, occurred in A.D. 70 when Roman legions served as God’s instrument of destruction upon the homeland’s capital (Luke 21:24). According to historian Josephus, approximately one million Jews died and ninety-seven thousand were taken as slaves, leaving the nation scattered across the world.

 

Since the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70, no Jewish client nation has existed. Modern-day Israel, established in 1948, is the Jewish nation-state, but it is not the regenerate nation that God ordained to represent Him to the world. Not until the Second Advent will believing Jews of history be regathered as the promised client nation (Deut. 30:3–5; Joel 3:1–2). In the meantime, God’s chosen people remain largely dispersed, under divine discipline, yet still protected by His unbreakable promise (Gen. 12:1–3).

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