The Destruction of the Second Bet Hamikdash -
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Vespasian sent Titus the wicked [to command the legions].
Titus said [quoting the verse (Deuteronomy 32:37)]: Where
is their G-d, the rock in whom they trust - and this
is Titus the wicked, who desecrated the holy and blasphemed
Heaven!
What did Titus do? He took a prostitute by the hand
[i.e., premeditatedly] and entered the Holy of Holies
[with her], spread out a Torah scroll and committed
a sin upon it. Then he took a sword and slashed the
curtain [that separated the Holy from the Holy of
Holies] and a miracle occurred and blood bubbled up
and flowed out and he thought that he had killed Him.
[And Titus' actions are those to which the verse (Psalms
74:4)] refers: Those who are hostile to You have roared
in the place where you appear. They have placed their
signatures [as if they are] signs [of truth].
Abba Chanan said: [The apparent lack of Divine reaction
to Titus' desecration of the Holy of Holies is indicative
of that which the verse (Psalms 89:9) states:] Who
is like You, Who are strong. [The verse should be
interpreted as meaning] who is like You, strong [in
Your restraint] and hard [to anger], for You hear
the taunts and blasphemies of that wicked man and
You are silent. The school of R. Yishma'el taught:
[The apparent lack of reaction is indicative of that
which the verse (Exodus 15:11) states:] Who is like
You among the G-ds, Hashem - i.e., who is like You
among the silent. [The Talmud's exegesis is based
on the similarity between the words eilim
What did he [Titus] do [after he had desecrated the
Holy of Holies]? He took the curtain and made it into
a sack. He took all of the vessels from the Bet Hamikdash
and placed them inside and loaded them onto a ship,
in order to show them off in Rome and to be lauded
for his success.
A storm at sea threatened to drown him. He said:
"It would seem to me that the power of the G-d
of these [people] is only manifested through water,
[for when] Pharaoh came, He drowned him in water.
When Sisera came, He drowned him in water. Now He
stands upon me to drown me in water. If He is mighty,
let Him come onto dry land and do battle with me!"
A Divine voice came forth and said to him: "Wicked
one, the son of a wicked one, descendant of Esav the
wicked, I have an insignificant creature in My world
called a gnat." And why is it called an insignificant
creature? For it has the ability to imbibe, but lacks
the ability to expel. "Come ashore and do battle
with it!" Titus went ashore and a gnat came and
entered his nostril, and pecked at his brain for seven
years.
One day, Titus was walking past a blacksmith's shop.
The gnat heard the noise of the sledgehammer and became
silent. Titus said: "There is a remedy [for my
suffering]!" Every day they brought a blacksmith
and he hammered in Titus' presence. To a gentile blacksmith
he would give four zuzim, but to a Jew he would say:
"It is sufficient that you see your enemy suffering!"
For thirty days they did this [i.e., brought smiths
to hammer in Titus' presence]. Afterwards, the gnat
became accustomed [to the noise of the hammer and
continued pecking at Titus' brain even when the hammers
were struck].
We were taught, R. Pinchas ben Arova said: "I
was with the great men of Rome [at the time] and when
Titus died, they examined his brain and what they
found in it was like a bird, weighing two sela'im."
In the baraysa it says, like a year-old dove weighing
two litrin. Abbaye said: "We have a tradition
that its beak was of copper and its claws were of
iron."
As Titus lay dying, he instructed his servants: "Burn
me and scatter my ashes over the seven seas so that the
G-d of the Jews cannot find me and bring me to judgment."
Onkelos, the son of Kalonikus, was the son of Titus'
sister. He wanted to convert to Judaism. After Titus
died, Onkelos made contact with his spirit, and asked
him: "Who is considered important in that world?"
Titus replied: "Israel."
Onkelos asked: "Is it worthwhile to join them?"
Titus replied: "Their commandments are many and
you will be unable to fulfill them. Go and torment
them in this world, and you will be great, as the
verse (Eicha 1:5) states: Her tormentors are great,
her enemies are serene- All who torment Israel become
great."
Onkelos then asked him: "How are you being punished?"
Titus said to him: "According to what I brought
upon myself. Every day they gather my ashes, judge
me, burn me, and spread my ashes on the seven seas."
Onkelos then went and raised the spirit of Bilam
and said to him: "Who is considered important
in that world?" Bilam said to him: "Israel."
Onkelos asked: "Is it worthwhile to join them?"
Bilam said: Do
not seek their peace nor their welfare all of your
days (Deuteronomy 23:7).
He [Onkelos] said to him: "How are you being
punished?" He said to him: "In boiling semen."
He [Onkelos then] went, raised the spirit of a renegade
Jew and said to him: "Who is considered important
in that world?" He replied: "Israel."
Onkelos asked: "Is it worthwhile to join them?"
He said to him: "Seek their welfare but do not
seek to do them harm, for all who harm them, it is
as if they have harmed the apple of His eye."
Onkelos said to him: "How are you being punished?"
He replied: "In boiling feces."
[And the reason why he received this punishment is]
as Mar said: Anyone who ridicules the words of the
Sages is punished by [being placed in] boiling feces.
***
We learned: R. Elazar said, "Come and see how
great is the punishment for causing embarrassment
- for G-d assisted Bar Kamtza [i.e., He allowed Bar
Kamtza's plot to succeed because of the embarrassment
caused him] and He destroyed His house and burned
His Tabernacle."
Why was the first Bet Hamikdash destroyed? Because
of three sins that were prevalent: idolatry, forbidden
relationships, and murder. During the second Bels
ha-Mikdash, the people learned Torah, fulfilled the
mitzvos, and engaged in acts of kindness - why then
was it destroyed? Because baseless hatred was prevalent.
This teaches us that baseless hatred is equivalent
to the three cardinal sins of idolatry, forbidden
relationships, and murder.
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The Book of Our Heritage
Feldheim
Publisher