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Before Jerusalem Fell - EntreWave

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The Persecution of Christianip 297<br />

Third, although the matter is still subject to debate, there is<br />

reason to believe that the Neronic persecution extended beyond<br />

Rome and into the provinces. At least there is more suggestive<br />

evidence for this being the case under Nero than under Domitian.<br />

Since Christianity had become a religio illicita and the emperor himself<br />

had taken severe measures to suppress it, almost certainly we can<br />

expect that at least by imitation provincial magistrates would engage<br />

themselves in the matter. As late date advocate William Ramsay<br />

suggests: “we conclude that if Tacitus has correctly represented his<br />

authorities, the persecution of Nero, begun for the sake of diverting<br />

popular attention, was continued as a permanent police measure<br />

under the form of a general prosecution of Christians as a sect<br />

dangerous to the public stiety. . . . When Nero had once established<br />

the principle in Rome, his action served as a precedent in every<br />

province. There is no need to suppose a general edict or formal law.<br />

The precedent would be quoted in every case where a Christian was<br />

accused.”51 Surely it would be the case that “the example set by the<br />

emperor in the capital could hardly be without influence in the<br />

provinces, and would justi$ the outbreak of popular hatred.”52 Other<br />

competent scholars concur. 53<br />

Evidently Pliny’s famous correspondence with Trajan (c. A.D.<br />

113) implies a long-standing imperial proscription of Christianity, a<br />

proscription surely earlier and certainly more severe than Domitian’s.<br />

54 Although it once was held by many that Pliny’s correspondence<br />

was evidence that the policy of proscribing Christianity was a<br />

new policy of Trajan, this view is “now almost universally abandoned.”5<br />

5 In Pliny’s inquiry to Trajan as to how to treat the Christians<br />

brought before him, he is concerned with a standing legal<br />

proscription.<br />

51. Ramsay, Church in Roman Empire, pp. 241, 245.<br />

52. Schafi Hzstory 1:384.<br />

53. F. J. A. Hort, Th First Epistle of St Petir (London: Macmillan, 1898), p. 2;<br />

Henderson, Church in Rome, p. 137; Angus, “Roman Empire,” ISBE 42607; John Laurence<br />

von Mosheim, History of Chrirtiani& in ttk First Thee Centuries (New York. Converse,<br />

1854) 1: 141K; Moses Stuart, CommentaU on the Apoca@pse, 2 VOIS. (Andover: Allen,<br />

Merrill, and Wardwell, 1845) 1 :222ff. Schatf cites Ewald, Renan, C. L. Roth, and<br />

Weiseler as assuming “that Nero condemned and prohibited Christianity as dangerous<br />

to the state” (Histo~ 1:384, n. 1).<br />

54. Hort, 1 Peter, p. 2.<br />

55. S. Angus, “Roman Empire” in ISBE 42607.

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