Posted on 09/11/2013 4:30:11 AM PDT by markomalley
Given all the talk of Syria in the news lately, I was asked if Syria is the same Assyria that is mentioned in the Bible. The answer is no from a political perspective. The modern state of Syria was formed after World War I and became independent after World War II.
However, there are historical connections to ancient Assyria, including some similar territory. Given the recent news, perhaps we can take a brief look at ancient Assyria and the role it played in Biblical history. As with everything in Scripture, there are important teachings and admonitions for us.
Assyria was one of the Great Mesopotamian powers along with the Babylonians and the nearby Persians. The areas they occupied are roughly close to the borders of modern day Syria (Assyria), Iraq (Babylon) and Iran (Persia). Assyria in particular, was located to the east and Northeast of the Northern Kingdom of Israel stretching into Mesopotamia (the broad plain between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers). See map at upper right, click to enlarge.
Assyria as a nation began a rise to power in the 13th Century BC and contended with Egypt and Babylon for control of the area of Palestine. During this time, The Jewish people were in bondage in Egypt.
Assyria enjoyed a kind of Golden age from 12th 10 Centuries BC. but became weakened through corruption and increasing hostilities with Babylon to its south. It was during this time that the Jews reentered Palestine and reached their own Golden Age under King David. Even after David, Omri the King of Israel had conquered part of Assyria and the Land of Aram near modern day Damascus and Made an alliance with the Phoenicians to the North (modern day Lebanon). This was the height of the North Kingdoms (Israel) power, and the Assyrian armies were largely held in check.
But, beginning in the 9th Century BC Assyria began a reform that led to it arising once more as a formidable power. During that same period, (9th 8th Centuries BC), The Jews were in a decline as the Northern Kingdom of Israel and the Southern Kingdom of Judah had divided and were engaged in increasing conflict and even outright war with one another.
Assyria grew stronger, and by the early 8th Century and began to dominate the nations of the Ancient Near East, with Israel still being its most formidable foe.
Among the newer weapons the Assyrians employed were the battering ram, along with ladders to scale ancient walls. The Assyrians were also great charioteers, having some 2,ooo chariots, most of them large enough to carry two or three men with weapons. Assyria also had a reputation for great bowmen, slingers and even some cavalry.
Israel by comparison at the time had only 10 chariots and tended to win more through superior tactics than by lots of equipment.
By the late 8th Century (c.a. 725 BC) Assyrian had reconquered Babylon and was dominating Israel, demanding tribute. The Prophets had been warning Israel that due to her sins, she was growing weaker and her enemies were growing stronger. God sent Elijah and Elisha, Amos and Hosea. Each in their own way warned that power had corrupted the northern Kingdom of Israel.
Elijah and Elisha warned of the extreme spiritual danger posed by the false worship of the Baals by many in Israel and the toleration of this by many more. Hosea depicted Israel as a false Bride who in her infidelity had become an adulterer and prostitute. He poured out Gods heart and reminded Israel of its first Love and that Gods was calling her back. Amos minced no words and denounced Israel for her injustice to the poor, violence and of even being willing to sacrifice her children to false gods!
Yet there was a consistent refusal to heed the call to repent. This period is the background for the story of the Prophet Jonah who was sent by God to Nineveh, the Capitol of Assyria to preach repentance. Jonah knew that if they repented they would grow stronger, so he fled and refused the mission. God pursued him, and after the storm at sea and a whale of a ride, Jonah did go, and the Assyrians of Nineveh did repent, and thereby grew stronger.
The final showdown with Israel came in 721 B.C. during the reign of King Hoshea who foolishly and against prophetic instruction made a pact with Egypt and refused to pay tribute to Assyria. Shalmanesar, King of Assyria attacked the Northern Kingdom of Israel utterly destroying it (cf 2 Kings 17). Those who survived disappeared into exile (the so-called 10 Lost Tribes of Israel). The few who remained intermarried with the Assyrians and became the Samaritan people.
An attempt to destroy the Southern Kingdom of Judah was miraculously turned back at the gates of Jerusalem when a likely case of dysentery afflicted the Assyrian army. Further conflicts in the decades ahead with Egypt and Babylon eclipsed Assyrian power once again. By the close of the 7th Century Assyria was little more than a loose confederation of Scythian Tribes.
The Modern State of Syria, though occupying Land similar to ancient Assyria, is not equivalent to or even a direct descendent of ancient Assyria. Syria was established after the first World War and was governed by the French who replaced the Ottomans. Syria gained independence in April 1946, as a parliamentary republic. But the post-independence period has been stormy, with a large number of military coups especially in the years 19491971.
A final thought. Jesus warned the people of his own day, This is a wicked generation. It asks for a sign, but none will be given it except the sign of Jonah (Lk 11:29) Jesus was harkening back to the historical paradox that when Israel would not repent, he frequently used the pagan nations around them to humble and purify them. Since Israel would not repent, God sent Jonah to strengthen the Assyrians and God eventually used Assyria to prune Israel, and execute justice for its failure to repent.
And thus for the people of Jesus time, if they would not repent, and come to believe, they, in their foolishness like Hoshea of old, would wage war, this time against the Romans, and suffer a horrible blow. That in fact happened in 70 AD when the Temple was destroyed and 1.2 million Jews died in the war.
It is a mysterious providence but it is also written to warn us. If we do not repent, we cannot be strong, and our enemies will surely overwhelm us. And what will our Assyria, our Rome be? It could be radical Islam, it could be our debt crisis, it could be our demographic winter. But by failing to repent, by our injustice, our refusal to keep commitments, our rising unbelief and ingratitude, by our sacrificing our children on the altars of our lust and our burning incense to the gods of this age, we are calling a just punishment and grave consequences that cannot forever wait.
No.
A little tweaking: the author mistakes Jews with Hebrews. Jews are descended from the Kingdom of Judah, the southern state. the whole of the people would be called Hebrews, I suspect because Abraham’s grandfather’s name was Ever, which has the same root consonants as Ivri, Hebrew for Hebrew.
The Assyrians are assumed to be Semites, while the Scythians are assumed to be Indo-European, perhaps Aryans, like the Persians and the Turks. Assyrians were not Scythians.
Ancient Syria was ruled and populated by Arameans, another Semitic people.
Ancient Assyria was located in northern Mesopotamia. The so-called "Assyrians" of today are not the ancient Assyrians but rather eastern Arameans (Syrians) who take their name from a British church mission to the area in the nineteenth century ("the Assyrian mission"). The so-called "Assyrian language" of today is merely eastern Syriac. The language of the ancient Assyrians is, like its speakers, long extinct.
However, as a Biblical sentimentalist, a reborn "Assyria" strike me as kind of neat (though they'd probably be anti-Israel). As a matter of fact, right after World War I there was talk of creating an independent "Assyria."
In Fr.Pope's words:
"If we do not repent, we cannot be strong, and our enemies will surely overwhelm us. And what will our Assyria, our Rome be? It could be radical Islam, it could be our debt crisis, it could be our demographic winter. But by failing to repent, by our injustice, our refusal to keep commitments, our rising unbelief and ingratitude, by our sacrificing our children on the altars of our lust and our burning incense to the gods of this age, we are calling a just punishment and grave consequences that cannot forever wait."
Given the players, I don't know if there is a solution other than to let the Sunnis and the Shiites destroy each other.
Even though the answer is “no”, this post reads like the book, “The Harbinger.” Modern Iraq is Assyria of the Bible
Catholic ping!
I would wager that there are more Syrians in Lebanon than Damascus.
For some reason, besides Beruit, they like the Bakka Valley.
I wonder why?
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Abraham's grandfather was Nahor. He had a more remote ancestor named Eber, six generations back.
The Scythians and Persians spoke Iranian languages of the Indo-European language family, which were related to the languages brought into India by the so-called Aryans. The Turkic languages are completely unrelated (they are distantly related to Mongolian).
Assyria was really Ashuria, the descendents of Shem’s second son Ashur.
Syria, population wise is mostly Selucid Turks.
That’s where the water runs.
The modern riddle of the sphinx, as it were - er, grew.
A sphinx (Greek: Σφίγξ /sphinx, Botian: Φίξ /Phix) is a mythical creature with, as a minimum, the body of a lion and a human head. In Greek tradition, it has the haunches of a lion, the wings of a great bird, and the face of a woman. She is mythicised as treacherous and merciless.
Back from the memory hole:
The Sphink at Giza gazes over the horizon at its own image on the ground, which in turn is facing (bowing toward) Mecca.
Sure, man controls his own destiny. /s
Racially, Turks are Aryan, not Mongolian.
Runs along with the drugs and weapons...slave trade, and spices too.
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The drugs mostly run north along the Black Sea.
You are annoying sometimes, but fun none the less.
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Scolding does annoy the kids, but keeping them amused is important too :o)
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