« J. AJ 4.10 | J. AJ 4.11 | J. AJ 4.12 | About This Work »
111. That which is usually the case of great armies, and especially upon ill success, to be hard to be pleased, and governed with difficulty, did now befall the Jews; for they being in number six hundred thousand, and by reason of their great multitude not readily subject to their governors, even in prosperity, they at this time were more than usually angry, both against one another and against their leader, because of the distress they were in, and the calamities they then endured.
« J. AJ 4.10 | J. AJ 4.11 | J. AJ 4.12 | About This Work »