Pergamos in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
A city of Mysia, three miles N. of the River Caicus. Eumenes
II (197-159 B.C.) built a beautiful city round an
impregnable castle on "the pine-coned rock." Attalus II
bequeathed his kingdom to Rome 133 B.C. The library was its
great boast; founded by Earaches and destroyed by Caliph
Omar. The prepared sheepskins were called pergamena charta
from whence our "parchment" is derived. The Nicephorium, or
thank offering grove for victory over Antiochus, had an
assemblage of temples of idols, Zeus, Athene, Apollo,
Aesculapius, Dionysus, Aphrodite. Aesculapius the healing
god (Tacitus, Ann. 3:63) was the prominent Pergamean idol
(Martial); the Pergamenes on coins are called "the principal
"temple care-takers" (neokoroi) of Asia," and their ritual
is made by Pausanias a standard. The grove of Aesculapius
was recognized by the Roman senate under Tiberius as having
right of sanctuary.
The serpent (Satan's image) was sacred to him,
charms and incantations were among medical agencies then,
and Aesculapius was called "saviour." How appropriately the
address to the Pergamos church says, "I know thy works, and
where thou dwellest, even where Satan's seat (throne) is,"
etc. Here Antipas, Jesus' "faithful martyr," was slain
(Revelation 2:12-16). (See ANTIPAS.) "Thou hast them that
hold the doctrine of Beldam who taught Balak to cast a
stumbling-block before ... Israel, to eat things sacrificed
unto idols and to commit fornication"; this naturally would
happen in such an idol-devoted city. The Nicolaitanes
persuaded some to escape obloquy by yielding in the test of
faithfulness, the eating of idol meats; even further, on the
plea of Christian "liberty," to join in fornication which
was a regular concomitant of certain idols' worship.
Jesus will compensate with "the hidden manna" (in
contrast to the occult arts of Aesculapius) the Pergamene
Christian who rejects the world's dainties for Christ. Like
the incorruptible manna preserved in the sanctuary, the
spiritual feast Jesus offers, an incorruptible life of body
and soul, is everlasting. The "white stone" is the
glistering diamond, the Urim ("light") in the high priest's
breast-plate; "none" but the high priest "knew the name" on
it, probably Jehovah. As Phinehas was rewarded for his zeal
against idol compliances and fornication (to which Balaam
seduced Israel), with "an everlasting priesthood," so the
heavenly priesthood is the reward of those zealous against
New Testament Balaamites. Now Bergamo.
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