2015-08-16 Luke 12:49-53 Five-Alarm Fire
Notes
Transcript
FIVE-ALARM FIRE
(Luke 12:49-53)
Date: __________________
Read Lu 12:49-53 – Abe Lincoln told of a man who enlisted in the War of
1812. His girl said she’d embroider a belt: “Victory or Death.” He said,
“That’s kinda strong. Suppose you put ‘Victory or Be Wounded!’” He
wanted “half-in.” But a half-committed solider is a danger to everyone. Well,
Jesus’ followers must be all in. To be half for Him and half for me is a
modern, mostly American, invention. Jesus never taught it that way!
Here He has just urged His followers to be ready for His return by watching
expectantly and working earnestly. The unfaithful servant who returns to his
own pursuits will find condemnation in his future. Now Jesus explains why –
why the line of demarcation between true faith and mere professors is so
clearly defined. What He has to say is shocking. The death He anticipates
forces a choice. It is eternal life or death. So: I. Jesus’ Surprising Strategy;
II. Jesus’ Supreme Sacrifice; III. Jesus’ Severing Specter.
I.
Jesus’ Surprising Strategy
49
“I came to cast fire on the earth, and would that it were already kindled!”
Skip to v. 51: “Do you think that I have come to give peace on earth? No, I tell
you, but rather division.” Wow! Where did that come from? The disciples
were shocked at those words as are we. Isn’t Messiah described as the
“Prince of Peace”? (Isa 9:6)? Is He not the One who pronounced blessing on
peacemakers? Didn’t Zacharias prophesy that He came “to guide our feet into
the way of peace” (Lu 1:79)? Didn’t the angels sing “and on earth peace
among those with whom he is pleased!” at His birth (Lu 2:14)? Didn’t He
often send people away by saying, “Go in peace” (Lu 7:50)? Doesn’t Paul say
in Eph 2:14, “ For he himself is our peace”? Yes to all of those!
Jesus did come to bring peace – the only peace that really matters in the end –
peace with God. The peace He came to enable is between hopelessly lost
people and an infinitely holy God. But that peace comes at great price and it
automatically means war with the world. They are two sides to the same coin.
This is reflected in Jesus’ first statement: I came to cast fire on the earth.” If
your conception is of a gentle Jesus meek and mild who would never harm a
flea, that is a Jesus of your own making. That is not the Jesus of the Bible.
1
That Jesus came to stir everything up, including you and me. That Jesus
came to stake claims on lives. That Jesus came to cast fire on earth.
What does it mean to cast fire on earth? To the Jewish mind, steeped in the
OT, fire represented two things. First and foremost it represented judgment.
Gen 19:24, “Then the LORD rained on Sodom and Gomorrah sulfur and fire
from the LORD out of heaven.” Psa 11: 6) Let him rain coals on the wicked; fire
and sulfur and a scorching wind shall be the portion of their cup.” “Isa 66: 15)
“For behold, the LORD will come in fire, and his chariots like the whirlwind,
to render his anger in fury, and his rebuke with flames of fire.” The list goes
on. Jesus is saying, “I came to cast judgment on the earth.” Make no mistake,
what Jesus did in paying the penalty for sin set the stage for coming judgment.
But fire also meant purification. For believers fire symbolized purification.
Mal 3:2 speaking of Messiah’s coming: “But who can endure the day of his
coming, and who can stand when he appears? For he is like a refiner’s fire and
like fullers’ soap.” The passage goes shows how he purifies believers so they
can offer acceptable sacrifices. But at the same time in v. 5 He also judges
unbelievers. When Jesus talks about casting fire on earth, He is indicating that
His agenda is to judge unbelievers and purify believers. His presence and
work demand a reaction. He doesn’t just draw a line in the sand, He IS a line
in the sand. To follow Him is to experience the fire of purification; to reject
Him is to experience the fire of judgment. Either way, He makes things hot.
Remember how the French greeted the Allies as conquering heroes when they
entered Paris in Dec. 1944? Cheers everywhere. But the Germans fled for their
lives. Why? It was the same troops coming at the same time. The difference,
of course, was that for the Germans the American invasion represented
judgment – for the French, the same invasion represented liberation. Same
troops – totally different reaction. That’s just what Jesus does. He casts a fire
on earth – a fire of judgment for some and purification for others. The
difference – some accept his Lordship; most do not.
The Fresno Bee gave this weather forecast one day: "Precipitation is likely to
be lower than normal, higher than normal or roughly the same as normal."
Talk about straddling the fence! But that’s what many want to do with Christ.
They want His blessings, but not His Lordship. They want Him at the
funeral, but not in life. They want Him on Sunday, but not the rest of the
week. He won’t go there, Beloved. He didn’t come to be patronized or used!
He came to cast fire on you and me. The question is, is it a purifying one or a
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condemning one. That’s up to us. But God in the flesh can’t be ignored. He
came to cast fire? Question is – which side of the fire are we on?
II.
Jesus’ Supreme Sacrifice
49
“I came to cast fire on the earth, and would that it were already kindled!”
The problem of sin and guilt is deeper and wider and higher than any human
solution could ever address. Sin must be paid for. We know that. That’s why
we have human court systems. But how to satisfy God’s requirement for
justice? Payment must be made by each individual – or it must be assumed
by God Himself. Jesus came to assume that judgment, to cast fire on earth –
but note that last phrase. It is heartrending. Here is the humanity of Jesus on
full display -- would that it were already kindled!” The fire of judgment has
not yet been kindled as He addresses this crowd. But Jesus is anxious to get on
with it. The price is going to be so high, the penalty so painful, the cost to Him
so great. He wishes it done and over. Oh, would that it were already kindled!”
When I was a little boy, ice cream was a luxury we seldom got. We got more
little brothers instead and with all those mouths to feed, ice cream was seldom
on the menu. But one day, I knew there was some in the chest-style freezer on
our back porch. And I decided I could help myself to a spoonful or two when
no one was looking. The devil made me do it, folks! I got my little snack, put
the carton back and closed the lid – only something didn’t fit and it broke the
inside cover. I was in trouble. Mom found out; I confessed. But rather than
discipline herself which she was very capable of doing – she left it for Dad.
Let me tell you – that was a long day. The wrath of my father was always very
Godly. He told you why, and then, if the situation warranted, he spanked you. I
could take that. It was the tears I couldn’t take. I always knew he wasn’t
kidding – it hurt him more than it did me. I wanted the fire of my father’s
wrath kindled so it could get over with and I could get on the other side. It was
a long day. Now multiple that a million-billion times and you know what Jesus
meant when he said, “and would that it were already kindled”. He longed to
finish His mission and get on the other side of the cross.
Because it’s the cross we’re talking about, isn’t it? V. 50 confirms: “I have a
baptism to be baptized with, and how great is my distress until it is
accomplished! “Distrssed” means to hem in, press. Ever see a thriller with a
guy trapped in a closed tank with water rising and no way out? That’s the
picture. Jesus is pressed. The cross has loomed over His whole life. Have you
seen the pix in our stairway? Joseph is working at a carpenter bench, and
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Jesus, age 2 or 3 is kneeling down playing with some spikes. As He does, He
casts a shadow – shaped like a cross. The cross has always been before Him.
It loomed even before time began. I Pet 1:19-20 says we are ransomed “with
the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot. 20 He
was foreknown before the foundation of the world”. Death for sin has been
on Jesus’ radar forever. And now, after eons of time, it is upon Him. The vice
is tightening; the cross is never out of His mind. He tells His disciples, but no
one gets it. He is alone in His distress. Gethsemane was the climactic battle.
But His life was a perpetual Gethsemane. The cross always loomed.
“I have a baptism to be baptized with.” We entirely miss the intensity. To us
baptism is a celebration, usually in heated water! But only because of what
Jesus purchased in a much different kind of baptism. The word baptize
means to plunge under water, to immerse. Jesus is overwhelmed at the thought
of what awaits Him. So, is it the horror of physical torture that drives His
distress. No. He’s not less than other men who have endured that with faith
and calm. Something else overwhelms Jesus. It is the anticipation of in Paul’s
words “becoming a curse for us” (Gal 3:13). It is the horror of the devastating
torrent of sin that He sees coming His way that leaves His perfect self shaken
– every lie, every genocide, every adultery, every murder, every child abuse,
every evil thought and deed. “For our sake His loving Father was about to
make him to be sin who knew no sin.” (II Cor 5:21). That is what crushed
Jesus – the thought of becoming you and me, of absorbing the full wrath of
God against sin in His own person. No wonder He was overwhelmed.
So, why did He do it? Why didn’t He just say to the Father, “I cannot abide
the thought of being separated from you. Our wills have been one for all
eternity. Our love has been one for all eternity. The prospect of a breach is
too much. Let me come home.” His prayer in Gethsemane wasn’t far short of
that. Mrk 14:36, “And he said, “Abba, Father, all things are possible for you.
Remove this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will.” Can you
sense the agony of His plea? Why did He go thru with it?
Heb 12:2 tells us why: “who for the joy that was set before him endured the
cross, despising the shame.” Jesus looked ahead. Just as He urged others to
take an eternal perspective, so does He. And as He looked into eternity future,
what did He see? Rev 5:9, “for you were slain, and by your blood you
ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and
nation.” He saw the redeemed of all the ages gathered around the throne. He
saw you, Beloved. And He said, “I’ll go. I’ll go kindle that fire. I’ll be
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overwhelmed by the baptism of sin and wickedness and evil. I’ll fulfill
Isaiah 53:4-5, “Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows; yet
we esteemed him stricken, smitten by God, and afflicted. 5 But he was pierced
for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities.” He didn’t go for
His own sake. He went for ours. Despite the distress He went “until it is
accomplished.” The word “accomplished” is a form of Jesus’ next to last
words on the cross, “Tetelesthai – It is finished.” What was finished? What did
He complete? The payment of sin’s penalty. Redemption was finished.
Do you see now why it is so evil to reject Him? Would the Father have put
Jesus thru all that and it wasn’t absolutely necessary? That would be
unthinkable. But that means the cross draws a line in the sand, doesn’t it? To
reject Him and insist that I can work my own way to heaven is the greatest
insult one could ever offer God and the greatest sin in the world. I might as
well be there pounding the nails myself. It’s no wonder hell is in the future of
every person who rejects the Lordship of Jesus Christ. They have turned down
the most costly gift in history and turned it into a fire of judgment.
My Grandmother used to tell me of the deathly fear they had of wild fires on
the plains of NE. I read one time of a father and his daughter who were
walking through a Canadian prairie when they saw a great fire in the distance.,
headed toward them, sure to engulf them. But the father had a plan. He
quickly lit a fire and watched it burn away from them. Then they stood in the
section that had already been burned. As the flames approached the little girl
was terrified. But her father explained, “The flames can’t get us here. We are
standing where the fire has already been.” That’s what the cross is all about,
Beloved. When you give your life to Christ, you are standing where the
wrath of God’s judgment has already been. It cannot touch you because Jesus
has already absorbed it all. He’s taken the fire of judgment for you if you trust.
III.
Jesus’ Severing Specter
51
Do you think that I have come to give peace on earth? No, I tell you, but
rather division. 52 For from now on in one house there will be five divided,
three against two and two against three. 53 They will be divided, father against
son and son against father, mother against daughter and daughter against
mother, mother-in-law against her daughter-in-law and daughter-in-law
against mother-in-law.” “Why can’t we all just get along?” Remember Rodney
King? And the answer spiritually is crystal clear. It is because peace with God
means enmity with the world and vice versa. This never surprised Jesus in the
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least. He knew His presence was a lighting rod for antagonism for those who
do not love God. He came to bring peace, but the peace He came to bring was
peace with God thru forgiveness of sins made possible by His sacrificial death.
But with that priceless gift comes enmity with the world. Jas 4:4: “You
adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity
with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes
himself an enemy of God.” We have to pick our poison. Peace with God and
war with the world; or peace with the world and war with God. The line was
drawn at Calvary, and we must all choose our side.
And sometimes the division will cut right through families. Is that what He
desires? Of course not? He is “not willing that any should perish but that all
should come to repentance.” That is His desire. But since many will not turn
to Him, division is inevitable – sometimes within families. Some of you have
been there. Jesus has a severing impact bc some will accept Him and others
will not. He Himself draws the line in Lu 14:26, “26 “If anyone comes to me
and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and
brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple.” Of
course, He’s not literally saying, “Hate your family.” But He’s saying, “If it
comes down to them or Me, it has to be Me.” Our love for Jesus must far
exceed any other. And sometimes that means a high price.
Conc -- Mack Stiles was preaching in Magadi, Kenya one morning to some
Muslim students. No one moved at his invitation, and he closed the service,
disappointed, feeling he had not connected with the kids. Outside a young man
approached him, however. He introduced himself as Robert, and then, looking
down at the dust said, “What you talked about in there – I would like to have
it.” So Mack went thru his normal presentation of salvation – God’s holiness,
our sin, Christ’s death in our place, the need for commitment and the cost that
can come. Robert had clearly heard it all before, but when Mack asked if he
would like to accept Christ now, Robert said, “Yes.” But before they prayed,
Mack asked, almost as an afterthought. “Robert, you seem to know most of
what it means to become a Xn. What has held you back from accepting Jesus
in the past?” Robert looked down at the clay, making circles in the dust with
his foot. Then he said, “My father has told me that if I become a Xn, he will
beat me. Tonight . . . tonight I will bleed.”
We have no clue, do we? Let’s face it, we know very little about the cost of
discipleship in America. That’s why Jesus’ statements seem extreme. But
when you begin to understand just a little bit the awful price He paid to cover
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our sins, you begin to understand why there is no “half-in” with Him. There’s
no “I’ll take some of Jesus, but a lot of me, too.” It’s all or nothing, Beloved.
He bled for us; now the question is, are we willing to bleed for Him –
whatever that means in our life. Let’s pray.
said.
I went out to the courtyard beside the school. The hard-packed orange
clay was a great place to kick dirt. I prayed; they weren't nice prayers. "God, I
feel like the biggest fool… I didn't say a thing those kids could understand…
John should've spoken today, not me. Why did you send me all this way
to . . ." but then I sensed someone beside me. I turned, embarrassed that
somebody might have overheard me grumbling to God. "Hello," said a young
man. "Hello," I replied. I extended my hand.
He took my hand. "My name is Robert." He looked down at the dust.
"What you talked about in there… I would like to have it." "Okay, Robert," I
said, "let's talk."
Robert seemed quiet, reflective. I went through the same outline I
always go through: God, People, Christ, Response, Cost. I even asked Robert
if he understood the cost. I'm a bit embarrassed about that now. As we talked it
was clear Robert had heard this before. "Would you like to accept Christ
now?" I asked. "Yes," he said quietly. Then, almost as an afterthought, I asked,
"Robert, you seem to know most of what it means to become a Christian.
What has held you back from accepting Christ in the past?" Robert looked
down at the clay. He made circles in the dust with his foot. "My father has told
me that if I become a Christian he will beat me. Tonight… I will bleed."
J. Mack Stiles, Speaking of Jesus, page 174.
Response to his message inevitably leads to peace with God, but
antagonism from the world
7
Courage; Accepting Christ; Receiving Christ; Salvation; Martyrdom;
Suffering; Commitment; Commitment to Christ; Sacrifice; Cost; After a
time, John gave me a gracious introduction as the speaker. "Preach with
power, brother," he whispered to me before he sat down. And I did. The
students hung on every word (in Magadi, Kenya)
At the end of my talk I said, "If God has spoken to your heart tonight,
don't delay. Come to Christ. Those who would like to receive Christ, gather
with me here, now, and I'll tell you how." John strummed all is yesterday as
arena: you will I'll owl was almost gone is an estimate I just listen to my
husband probably less than an hour ago that I could not believe how it is
schools almost back in a the guitar. I braced myself for the rush.
Isn't it strange how God works? How what we want to see happen is
not always what God wants to happen? How what we think is powerful is not
always what God thinks is powerful? Nobody moved. Nobody! I repeated
myself. I shifted back and forth on my feet. I felt awkward and dumb. After
scanning the crowd, John repeated that anyone who wanted to talk to me or
him about coming to Christ could talk to us. Then he dismissed the group. I
was stunned.
As the students dispersed, John came over to me and said the CU
leadership wanted to talk to him about some organizational things; he would
meet with them for a while before we left. He turned to go, then turned back
and touched my elbow. "It's a hard place, Mack," he said.
I went out to the courtyard beside the school. The hard-packed orange
clay was a great place to kick dirt. I prayed; they weren't nice prayers. "God, I
feel like the biggest fool… I didn't say a thing those kids could understand…
John should've spoken today, not me. Why did you send me all this way
to . . ." but then I sensed someone beside me. I turned, embarrassed that
somebody might have overheard me grumbling to God. "Hello," said a young
man. "Hello," I replied. I extended my hand.
He took my hand. "My name is Robert." He looked down at the dust.
"What you talked about in there… I would like to have it." "Okay, Robert," I
said, "let's talk."
Robert seemed quiet, reflective. I went through the same outline I
always go through: God, People, Christ, Response, Cost. I even asked Robert
if he understood the cost. I'm a bit embarrassed about that now. As we talked it
was clear Robert had heard this before. "Would you like to accept Christ
now?" I asked. "Yes," he said quietly. Then, almost as an afterthought, I asked,
"Robert, you seem to know most of what it means to become a Christian.
What has held you back from accepting Christ in the past?" Robert looked
8
down at the clay. He made circles in the dust with his foot. "My father has told
me that if I become a Christian he will beat me. Tonight… I will bleed."
J. Mack Stiles, Speaking of Jesus, page 174.
Commitment; Commitment to Christ; Turning back; No turning back;
Reality; Lordship; Salvation; Receiving Christ; Death to self; Accepting
Christ; If you were inside the cockpit of an airplane just before liftoff, you
would hear the copilot or captain call out, “V1,” which means the “point of no
return.”
As the airplane accelerates toward the end of the runway, the pilot
must decide if the plane is moving fast enough for a safe takeoff. This speed
must be determined preflight based on several factors, including the air
pressure, temperature, speed of the wind, and weight of the aircraft.
The pilot holds the throttle as the plane approaches the V1 speed so
that the takeoff can be aborted if something goes wrong. However, after V1
the plane must take off.
As Christians, we also have a V1 commitment. Once we have placed
our faith in Christ alone, we have reached the point of no return. We need to
adjust our sights, apply full throttle, and take off.
[Reminds of the night when the engine blew out just before V1 in
Atlanta and the pilot saying they are trained to handle such emergencies, but
admitting there a few seconds of no-man’s land!]
Larson, C. B., & Ten Elshof, P. (2008). 1001 illustrations that connect (pp.
79–80). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.
Perseverance of the saints; Transformation; Conversion; Salvation;
Commitment; Commitment to Christ; Change; Doers; Christianity;
Demands of Christ; You may remember that in The Robe, Lloyd C. Douglas
had Marcellus accepting the invitation of Christ to be a disciple. The strong
man wrote to Diana, his lover in Rome, of his conversion. With penetrating
pertinence she replied: “What I feared was that it might somehow affect your
life—and mine, too. It is a beautiful story, Marcellus, a beautiful mystery.
Let it remain so. We don’t have to understand it. And we don’t have to do
anything about it; do we?”
Jones, G. C. (1986). 1000 illustrations for preaching and teaching (p. 313).
Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers.1
1 McNeff, D. (n.d.). New Illustrations.
9
Conc
Courage; Accepting Christ; Receiving Christ; Salvation; Martyrdom;
Suffering; Commitment; Commitment to Christ; Sacrifice; Cost; After a
time, John gave me a gracious introduction as the speaker. "Preach with
power, brother," he whispered to me before he sat down. And I did. The
students hung on every word (in Magadi, Kenya)
At the end of my talk I said, "If God has spoken to your heart tonight, don't
delay. Come to Christ. Those who would like to receive Christ, gather with me
here, now, and I'll tell you how." John strummed all is yesterday as arena: you
will I'll owl was almost gone is an estimate I just listen to my husband
probably less than an hour ago that I could not believe how it is schools
almost back in a the guitar. I braced myself for the rush.
Isn't it strange how God works? How what we want to see happen is
not always what God wants to happen? How what we think is powerful is not
always what God thinks is powerful? Nobody moved. Nobody! I repeated
myself. I shifted back and forth on my feet. I felt awkward and dumb. After
scanning the crowd, John repeated that anyone who wanted to talk to me or
him about coming to Christ could talk to us. Then he dismissed the group. I
was stunned.
As the students dispersed, John came over to me and said the CU
leadership wanted to talk to him about some organizational things; he would
meet with them for a while before we left. He turned to go, then turned back
and touched my elbow. "It's a hard place, Mack," he said.
I went out to the courtyard beside the school. The hard-packed orange
clay was a great place to kick dirt. I prayed; they weren't nice prayers. "God, I
feel like the biggest fool… I didn't say a thing those kids could understand…
John should've spoken today, not me. Why did you send me all this way
to . . ." but then I sensed someone beside me. I turned, embarrassed that
somebody might have overheard me grumbling to God. "Hello," said a young
man. "Hello," I replied. I extended my hand.
He took my hand. "My name is Robert." He looked down at the dust.
"What you talked about in there… I would like to have it." "Okay, Robert," I
said, "let's talk."
Robert seemed quiet, reflective. I went through the same outline I
always go through: God, People, Christ, Response, Cost. I even asked Robert
if he understood the cost. I'm a bit embarrassed about that now. As we talked it
was clear Robert had heard this before. "Would you like to accept Christ
now?" I asked. "Yes," he said quietly. Then, almost as an afterthought, I asked,
10
"Robert, you seem to know most of what it means to become a Christian.
What has held you back from accepting Christ in the past?" Robert looked
down at the clay. He made circles in the dust with his foot. "My father has told
me that if I become a Christian he will beat me. Tonight… I will bleed."
J. Mack Stiles, Speaking of Jesus, page 174.
Commitment; Commitment to Christ; Turning back; No turning back;
Reality; Lordship; Salvation; Receiving Christ; Death to self; Accepting
Christ; If you were inside the cockpit of an airplane just before liftoff, you
would hear the copilot or captain call out, “V1,” which means the “point of no
return.”
As the airplane accelerates toward the end of the runway, the pilot
must decide if the plane is moving fast enough for a safe takeoff. This speed
must be determined preflight based on several factors, including the air
pressure, temperature, speed of the wind, and weight of the aircraft.
The pilot holds the throttle as the plane approaches the V1 speed so
that the takeoff can be aborted if something goes wrong. However, after V1
the plane must take off.
As Christians, we also have a V1 commitment. Once we have placed
our faith in Christ alone, we have reached the point of no return. We need to
adjust our sights, apply full throttle, and take off.
[Reminds of the night when the engine blew out just before V1 in
Atlanta and the pilot saying they are trained to handle such emergencies, but
admitting there a few seconds of no-man’s land!]
Larson, C. B., & Ten Elshof, P. (2008). 1001 illustrations that connect (pp.
79–80). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.
The idiom "Crossing the Rubicon" means to pass a point of no return, and refers
to Julius Caesar's army's crossing of the river in 49 BC, which was considered an
act of insurrection. Because the course of the river has changed much since
then, it is impossible to confirm exactly where the Rubicon flowed when
Caesar and his legions crossed it, even though most evidence links it to the
river officially so named. The river is perhaps most known as the place where
Julius Caesar uttered the famous phrase "alea iacta est" – the die is cast.
Contents
[hide]
1 History
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2 Julius Caesar
3 Location, confusion and resolution
4 Present
5 Notes
6 External links
History[edit]
During the Roman republic, the river Rubicon marked the boundary between
the Roman province of Cisalpine Gaul to the north-east and Italy proper
(controlled directly by Rome and its socii (allies)) to the south. On the northwestern side, the border was marked by the riverArno, a much wider and more
important waterway, which flows westward from the Apennine Mountains (its
source is not far from Rubicon's source) into the Tyrrhenian Sea.
Governors of Roman provinces were
appointed promagistrates with imperium (roughly, "right to command") in their
province(s). The governor would then serve as the general of the Roman army
within the territory of his province(s). Roman law specified that only the
elected magistrates (consuls and praetors) could hold imperium within Italy.
Any promagistrate who entered Italy at the head of his troops forfeited
his imperium and was therefore no longer legally allowed to command troops.
Exercising imperium when forbidden by the law was a capital offence,
punishable by death. Furthermore, obeying the commands of a general who
did not legally possess imperium was also a capital offence. If a general
entered Italy whilst exercising command of an army, both the general and his
soldiers became outlaws and were automatically condemned to death.
Generals were thus obliged to disband their armies before entering Italy.
In 49 BC, perhaps on January 10, C. Julius Caesar led a single legion, Legio
XIII Gemina, south over the Rubicon from Cisalpine Gaul to Italy to make his
way to Rome. In doing so, he (deliberately) broke the law on imperium and
made armed conflict inevitable. Suetonius depicts Caesar as undecided as he
approached the river, and attributes the crossing to a supernatural apparition. It
was reported that Caesar dined with Sallust, Hirtius, Oppius, Lucius Balbus
and Sulpicus Rufus on the night after his famous crossing into Italy January
10.[20]
According to Suetonius, Caesar uttered the famous phrase ālea iacta
est ("the die has been cast").[1] The phrase "crossing the Rubicon" has survived
to refer to any individual or group committing itself irrevocably to a risky or
revolutionary course of action, similar to the modern phrase "passing the point
of no return". Caesar's decision for swift action forced Pompey, the lawful
consuls (C. Claudius Marcellus and L. Cornelius Lentulus Crus), and a large
part of the Roman Senate to flee Rome in fear. Caesar's subsequent victory
12
in Caesar's civil war ensured that punishment for the infraction would never
be rendered.
Location, confusion and resolution[edit]
After Caesar's crossing, the Rubicon was a geographical feature of note until
about 42 BC, when Octavian merged the Province of Gallia
Cisalpina into Italia and the river ceased to be the extreme northern border of
Italy. The decision robbed the Rubicon of its importance, and the name
gradually disappeared from the local toponymy.
Roman Legionary
Born with unbridled political ambition and unsurpassed oratory skills, Julius Caesar
manipulated his way to the
position of consul of Rome in 59 BC. After his year of service he was named
governor of Gaul where he amassed a personal fortune and exhibited his
outstanding military skill in subduing the native Celtic and Germanic tribes.
Caesar's popularity with the people soared, presenting a threat to the power of the
Senate and to Pompey, who held power in Rome. Accordingly, the Senate called
upon Caesar to resign his command and disband his army or risk being declared an
"Enemy of the State". Pompey was entrusted with enforcing this edict - the
foundation for civil war was laid.
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It was January 49 BC, Caesar was staying in the northern Italian city of Ravenna
and he had a decision to make. Either he acquiesced to the Senate's command or
he moved southward to confront Pompey and plunge the Roman Republic into a
bloody civil war. An ancient Roman law forbade any general from crossing the
Rubicon River and entering Italy proper with a standing army. To do so was treason.
This tiny stream would reveal Caesar's intentions and mark the point of no return.
The Die is Cast
Suetonius was a Roman historian and biographer. He served briefly as secretary to
Emperor Hadrian (some say he lost his position because he became too close to
the emperor's wife.) His position gave him access to privileged imperial
documents, correspondence and diaries upon which he based his accounts. For
this reason, his descriptions are considered credible. We join Suetonius's narrative
as Caesar receives the news that his allies in the Senate have been forced to leave
Rome:
"When the news came [to Ravenna, where Caesar was staying] that the
interposition of the tribunes in his favor had been utterly rejected, and that they
themselves had fled Rome, he immediately sent forward some cohorts, yet
secretly, to prevent any suspicion of his plan; and to keep up appearances, he
attended the public games and examined the model of a fencing school which he
proposed building, then - as usual - sat down to table with a large company of
friends.
However, after sunset some mules from a near-by mill were put in his carriage, and
he set forward on his journey as privately as
Julius Caesar
possible, and with an exceedingly scanty retinue. The lights went out. He lost his
way and wandered about a long time - till at last, by help of a guide, whom he
discovered towards daybreak, he proceeded on foot through some narrow paths,
and again reached the road. Coming up with his troops on the banks of the
Rubicon, which was the frontier of his province, he halted for a while, and revolving
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in his mind the importance of the step he meditated, he turned to those about him,
saying: 'Still we can retreat! But once let us pass this little bridge, - and nothing is
left but to fight it out with arms!'
Even as he hesitated this incident occurred. A man of strikingly noble mien and
graceful aspect appeared close at hand, and played upon a pipe. To hear him not
merely some shepherds, but soldiers too came flocking from their posts, and
amongst them some trumpeters. He snatched a trumpet from one of them and ran
to the river with it; then sounding the "Advance!" with a piercing blast he crossed
to the other side. At this Caesar cried out, 'Let us go where the omens of the Gods
and the crimes of our enemies summon us! THE DIE IS NOW CAST!'
Accordingly he marched his army over the river; [then] he showed them the
tribunes of the Plebs, who on being driven from Rome had come to meet him, and
in the presence of that assembly, called on the troops to pledge him their fidelity;
tears springing to his eyes [as he spoke] and his garments rent from his bosom."
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