30.05.2014 Views

Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

The Persecution of Chri.stianip 293<br />

Th Signtjicance of th Evideme for a Neronic Persecution<br />

As the evidence for the Neronic persecution is scrutinized, we<br />

must bear in mind that it clearly demonstrates, first, that Christians<br />

were punished, and that they were punished as Christians. Both Tacitus<br />

and Suetonius make reference to the fact that those punished<br />

were members of that hated religious sect. Suetonius mentions to<br />

Nero’s credit that the “Christians” were punished as members of a<br />

“new and mischievous supers tition. ” Tacitus speaks of them as “Christians”<br />

and as “detested” by the populace and as “guilty” of criminal<br />

activity. 33 Clearly the hated religious commitment of the Christians<br />

marked them out as worthy of punishment in the minds of the<br />

heathen populace.34<br />

These Christians were not punished as Jews, as may have been<br />

done by imperial confusion under Claudius when Jews were banished<br />

from Rome because of “Chrestus” (Christ) . 35 It is clear that although<br />

Rome had previously confused Christianity as a sect ofJudaism and<br />

33. The “crimes” of the Christians have nothing to do with the fire – Tacitus admits<br />

that Nero looked for scapegoats. The “crimes” of the Christians had to do with their<br />

aloofness from the “culture” of Rome. “The principles in which they gloried . . . forbade<br />

them to recognise the national gods or the religion of the Roman people, or to take part<br />

in any of the public religious ceremonies or spectacles, or in that worship of the gentw of<br />

Caesar . . .“ (Edmundson, Church in Rorw, p. 137). Tacitus’s reference to the Christians<br />

indicates they were thought to have a hatred for the human race: oa’so humani generis<br />

(Annals 15:44); see B. W. Henderson, Th Lzj2 and Priacipate ofthz Emperor Nero (London:<br />

Methuen, 1903), pp. 436-437. Ramsay wrote of this comment: “To the Remans genus<br />

hurnanum meant. not mankind in general. but the Roman world – men who lived<br />

L..<br />

according to Roman manners and laws; the rest of the human race were enemies and<br />

barbarians. The Christians then were enemies to civilised man and to the customs and<br />

laws which regulated civilised society. They were bent on relaxing the bonds that held<br />

society together . . .“ (William M. Ramsay, 7% Church in the Roman Empire B~ore A.D.<br />

170 [Grand Rapids: Baker, (1897) 1979, p. 236).<br />

34. Some have argued that the name “Christian” was uncommon in Nero’s day and<br />

was only used proleptically by the second century historians Tacitus and Suetonius. But<br />

these were men who freely derived their historical research from contemporary sources.<br />

Furthermore, Peter speaks of the Neronian persecution when he writes: “If a man suffer<br />

as a Christian let him not be ashamed, but let him glorifi God in this Name” ( 1 Pet.<br />

416). The name “Christian” was popularly employed in Antioch well before the 60s<br />

(Acts 11:26) and was even familiar to King A~ippa (Acts 2628). Pliny’s correspondence<br />

to Trajan also suggests that the name “Christian” was long known among imperial<br />

authorities by A.D. 112.<br />

35. Suetonius, Claudius 25:4: “Since the Jews constantly made disturbances at the<br />

instigation of Chrestus, he expelled them from Rome.” That Christians were affected by<br />

this banishment is evident fmm Acts 18:2. Obviously, the fact that many Christians were<br />

Jewish confused the Remans into considering Christianity a Jewish sect.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!