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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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96 BEFORE JERUSALEM FELL<br />

sentence Peter’s crucifixion at Rome, Paul’s beheading, and John’s<br />

banishment to an island.”47 The sentence in question read: KcM’<br />

Ii%.poG 62 dm’ ‘Pc@q< KCYTa K@Cd~G cmavpoikczl, llafiM< m<br />

\ &ror&@ral, ‘I@awq< TE VI@ zrapa&60zal.<br />

Stuart initially granted Tertullian to be a Domitianic reference,<br />

but later consideration persuaded him otherwise: “Now it strikes me,<br />

that Tertullian plainly means to class Peter, Paul, and John together,<br />

as having suffered at nearly the same time and under the same<br />

emperor. I concede that this is not a construction absolutely necessary;<br />

but I submit it to the candid, whether it is not the most<br />

probable.”w<br />

In a similar vein, historian Herbert B. Workman in his classic<br />

study, Persecution in tb Early Church, draws the following conclusions<br />

from the Tertullianic evidence: “St. John’s banishment to Patmos<br />

was itself a result of the great persecution of Nero. Hard labour for<br />

life in the mines and quarries of certain islands, especially Sardinia,<br />

formed one of the commonest punishments for Christians. . . . He<br />

lived through the horrors of two great persecutions, and died quietly<br />

in extreme old age at Ephesus.”49<br />

Furthermore, it would seem that Tertullian’s reference to an<br />

attempted oil martyrdom ofJohn is quite plausible historically. This<br />

is due to the very nature of the Neronic persecution of Christians in<br />

A.D. 64. Roman historian Tacitus describes the gruesome scene – a<br />

scene so evilly horrific that, even though Tacitus disparaged Christians<br />

as “detested for their abominable crimes,”5° he was moved to<br />

sympathy for the Christians by Nero’s actions: “And their death was<br />

aggravated with mockeries, insomuch that, wrapped in the hides of<br />

wild beasts, they were tom to pieces by dogs, or fastened to crosses<br />

to be set on fire, that when the darkness fell they might be burned to<br />

illuminate the night. . . . Whence it came about that, though the<br />

47. Ibid., p. xvii. See also Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset, and David Brown, A<br />

Commentary, Crttzkal and Explanatory, on the Old and New Tatarnenti, 2 vols. (Harttiord:<br />

Scranton, n.d.) 2:548.<br />

48. Stuart, Apoca~pse 1 :284n.<br />

49. Herbert B. Workman, Persecution in th Ear~ Church (Oxford: Oflord University<br />

Press, [1906] 1980), pp. 18, 19.<br />

50. In this reference Tacitus apparently reflects the current suspicion that Christians<br />

engaged in lewd, promiscuous “love feasts” (the early Agape Feast), had cannibalistic<br />

services (the Lord’s Supper being the blood and body of Christ), and worshiped the head<br />

of an ass.

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