GUEST ARTICLE
Early Non-Christian
Witnesses to Jesus Christ
Often we think all the witnesses to Jesus Christ are found
in the Bible. There are several early statements made by
non-Christians that bear witness to Him. These are given
below.
1.
Emperor Tiberitus (14-37) or Claudius (41-54) issued
an edict against grave robbing. An inscription of it
was found in Nazareth . It reads:
"Ordinances
of Caesar, it is my pleasure that graves and tombs remain
undisturbed in perpetuity for those who have made them for
the cult of their ancestors or children or members of their
house. If however any man lay information that another has
either demolished them, or has in any other way extracted
the buried, or has maliciously transferred them to other
places in order to wrong them, or has displaced the sealing
of other stones, against such one I order that a trial be
instituted, as in respect of the gods, so in regard to the
cult of mortals. For it shall be much more obligatory to
honor the buried. Let it be absolutely forbidden for anyone
to disturb them, in case of contravention I desire that the
offender be sentenced to capital punishment on charge of
violation of sepuiture."
Before this time punishment would had been mild. Why was
it changed to death? We know this decreed was soon after
Christ's resurrection. Was it due to a reaction against the
turmoil in Israel caused His resurrection?
2.
Josephus (A.D. 37-100), the Jewish historian,
would wrote a generation after Jesus Christ, makes several
references to people well-known to New Testament readers.
F. F. Bruce summarized the evidence:
"Here, in
the pages of Josephus, we meet many figures who are well
known to us from the New Testament; the colorful family of
the Herods; the Roman emperors Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius,
and the procurators of Judea; the high priestly families--Annas,
Caiaphas, Ananias, and the rest; the Pharisees and the Sadducees;
and so on" (F. F. Bruce, New Testament Documents:
Are They Reliable? p.104.)
He wrote explicitly about Jesus:
"At this
time there was a wise man who was called Jesus. . . . Pilate
condemned Him to be condemned and to die. And those who had
become His disciples did not abandon His discipleship. They
reported that He had appeared to them three days after His
crucifixion and that He was alive; accordingly, He was perhaps
the Messiah concerning whom the prophets have recounted wonders" (Antiquities,
xviii.ch. 3, subtopic 3, Arabic text).
"Now, there was about this
time, Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man,
for he was a doer of wonderful works--a teacher of such men
as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew ever to him both
many of the Jews, and many Gentiles. He was the Christ; and
when Pilate, at the suggestions of the principal men amongst
us, had condemned him to be condemned and to the cross, those
that loved him at the first did not foesake him, for he appeared
to them alive again the third day, as the divine prophets
had foretold these and the ten thousand other wonderful things
concerning him; and the tribe of Christians, so named from
him, are not extinct at this day" (Antiquities, xviii.ch.
3, subtopic 3, Greek text).
Note: The above are disputed passages, especially the second
one. Josephus writing were handed down through Christian
scribes. No Jew cared for this Jew turned Roman General.
Since Josephus was not a Christian it is unlikely statement
like "if it be lawful to call him a man ," "he
was the Christ," etc. Surely words were added to these
statements, especially to the second one. No unbelieving
Jew would made such statements about Jesus.
Josephus also wrote about James, the brother of Jesus.
"(Ananus)
assembled the sanhedrin of the judges, and brought before
them the brother of Jesus, the so-called Christ, whose name
was James, and some others, and when he had formed an accusation
against them as breakers of the law, he deliever them to
be stoned" (Antiquities XX 9:1).
3.
Cornelius Tacitus (A.D. 55?-after 117), the
Roman Historian, wrote of Nero's attempt to relieve himself
of the guilt of burning Rome :
"Hence to
suppress the rumor, he falsely charged with the guilt, and
punished with the most exquisite tortures, the persons commonly
called Christians, who were hated for their enormities. Christus,
the founder of the name, was put to death by Pontius Pilate,
procurator of Judea in the reign of Tiberius: but the pernicious
superstition, repressed for a time broke out again, not only
through Judea, where the mischief originated, but through
the city of Rome also" (Annals XV.44).
4.
Lucian (second century), Greek Satirist, alludes
to Christ in these words:
"The man
who was crucified in Palestine because he
introduced this new cult into the world. . . . Furthermore,
their first lawgiver persuaded them that they were all brothers
one of another after they have transgressed once for all
by denying the Greek gods and by worshipping that crucified
sophist himself and living under his laws" (On the Death
of Peregrine).
5.
Suetonius (c. A.D. 120), a Roman Historian
and court official under Hadrian made two references
to Christ. In the Life of Claudius (25.4) he wrote
"As the
Jews were making constant disturbances at the instigation
of Chestus [another spelling of Christus or Christ], he [Claudius]
expelled them from Rome ."
In the Lives of the Caesars (26.2) he wrote:
"Punishment
by Nero was inflicted on the Christians, a class of men given
to a new and mischievous superstition."
6.
Pliny the Younger (c. A.D. 112), when writing
to the emperor about his achievements as governor of Bithynia ,
wrote how he had killed multitudes of Christian men,
women, and children. He wrote:
"All who
denied that they were or had been Christians I consider should
be discharged, because they called upon the gods at my dictation
and did reverence, with incense and wine, your [the emperor's]
image . . . they curse Christ, which a genuine Christian
cannot be induced to do" (Epistles, X.96).
He also wrote in the same letter:
"[Christians}
were in the habit of meeting on a certain fixed day before
it was light, when they sang in alternate verse of a hymn
to Christ as to a god, and bound themselves to a solemn oath,
not to do any wicked deeds, and never to deny a truth when
they should be called upon to deliver it up."
7.
Thallus (c. A.D. 52) was a Samaritan-born
historian. Julius Africanus (c. A.D. 221) wrote:
"Thallus,
in the third book of his histories, explains away this darkness
[at the time of the crucifixion] as an eclipse of the sun-unreasonably,
as it seems to me."
This was unreasonable, of course, because a solar eclipse
could not take place at the time of the full moon, and it
was the time of the paschal full moon when Christ died.
8.
Mara Bar Serapion (after A.D. 73) wrote a
letter that now resides in the British Museum . According to F. F. Bruce it
was written by a father to his son in prison. In the
letter he compares the deaths of Socrates, Pythagoras,
and Jesus:
"What advantage
did the Jews gain from executing their wise King? It was
just after that that their kingdom was abolished. . . . But
Socrates did not die for good; he lived on in the teaching
of Plato. Pythagoras did not die for good; he lived on in
the statue of Hera. Nor did the wise King die for good; he
lived on in the teaching which he had given" (Bruce,
op. cit., p.14).
9.
The Jewish Talmud was completed by A.D. 500.
The Babylonian Talmud reference to Jesus:
"On the
eve of Passover they hanged Yeshu (of Nazareth) and them
herald went before him for forty days saying (Yeshu of Nazareth)
is going to be stoned in that he hath practiced sorcery and
beguiled and led astray Israel. Let everyone knowing aught
in his defense come and plead for him. But they found naught
in his defense and hanged him on the eve of Passover" (Sanhedrin
43a, "Eve of Passover").
R. Shimeon ben' Azzai wrote concerning Jesus:
"I found
a genealogical roll in Jerusalem wherein
was recorded, Such-an-one is a bastard of an adulteress" (Yeb.
IV 3; 49 a).
In summary, there are several reference to Jesus made by
non-Christians. Only those made by Josephus are open to question
since they were handed down through Christian scribes. The
others were handed down through Roman/Latin scribes and are
likely accurate copies of these writings.
by Leland M. Haines, Northville , Michigan USA .
December 1997.
Copyright 1997 by Leland M. Hines, Northville , Mich.
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