Multiplying by Mission: Session 3 at Mission Lake

40% Growth Then, 5% Growth Now — What We Must Learn Anew

In our last session, we looked closely at the seven undisputed letters of Paul and asked whether we can trust the words we read today to be the same words Paul originally wrote. We compared Paul’s manuscripts with those of other ancient authors and saw that, despite a gap before our earliest copies, Paul’s writings were treated as sacred from the very beginning. The early church copied and preserved them with great care.

Now we take the next step. Before moving forward with Paul’s journeys and the spread of Christianity, we need to step back and see the world in which Jesus and the first Christians lived. That means looking at the Roman leaders who set the stage — Julius Caesar, Augustus, and the Jewish rulers they empowered. Their decisions shaped the political, cultural, and even religious environment into which Christ was born and the gospel was first proclaimed.


1. Jewish Support for Julius Caesar (47–44 BC)

The Jews were not a marginal group in Caesar’s world — they were a significant presence across the Mediterranean, and their loyalty mattered.

During Caesar’s campaign in Egypt around 47 BC, Antipater, the father of Herod the Great, brought 3,000 Jewish troops to aid him. Antipater, serving as procurator of Judea (Rome’s appointed administrator), was the key power in Jerusalem at this time, and this explains how he could mobilize troops so decisively.

“When Caesar had settled the affairs of Syria, he made his expedition against Egypt. Antipater arrived with three thousand heavy-armed Jewish soldiers, and also managed to get the chiefs of Arabia to come to his assistance…”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.8.1 §190 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

Not long after, during Caesar’s campaign in Asia against Parthian-aligned forces, another 3,000 Jews under Hyrcanus II, the high priest in Jerusalem, rallied to his side. Hyrcanus was not only the religious head of the Jews but also recognized by Caesar as ethnarch, a civic ruler of the nation. His authority carried both sacred and political weight.

“The Jews in Asia also sent him three thousand men, by the command of Hyrcanus, their high priest, who was then in great friendship with Caesar.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.10.22 §295 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

This partnership — Antipater as Rome’s political agent and Hyrcanus as the high priest — tied Jewish fortunes directly to Caesar. It also set the stage for the rise of Antipater’s son, Herod the Great, who would later be crowned King of the Jews under Augustus and rule Judea at the time of Jesus’ birth (Matthew 2:1).


2. Jewish Mourning for Caesar’s Death (44 BC)

When Caesar was assassinated, the Jewish community expressed unusual devotion that astonished Roman observers.

“The Jews also mourned for him, and continued for many nights together to come to the place where his body was burned.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.10.1 §213 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

Appian, a Roman historian writing later in the second century, confirms the same remarkable detail:

“At his funeral the Jews alone mourned for him, and they stayed by the pyre for many nights.”
—Appian, Civil Wars 2.148 (c. AD 120, Loeb)

Both Josephus and Appian highlight how the Jews stood apart in their loyalty to Caesar. In a city divided between factions — some celebrating his assassination, others fearing the consequences — the Jews alone kept vigil at his tomb. Their devotion explains why Caesar’s decrees were so generous: he had every reason to bind the Jewish nation tightly to Rome.


3. Size of the Jewish Population (1st century BC–1st century AD)

Caesar’s favor toward the Jews was not simply personal; it was strategic. By the 1st century BC, the Jewish people were numerous, organized, and strategically placed across the empire.

Josephus emphasizes their strength in Rome itself:

“As for the Jews, they had already increased in numbers so greatly that it would have been hard to expel them from the city.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.7.2 §110 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

Elsewhere, he insists their influence stretched across the Mediterranean:

“There is not a single city of the Greeks or of the barbarians, nor a single nation, to which our custom of abstaining from work on the seventh day has not spread, and where our fasts and the lighting of lamps and many of our dietary restrictions are not observed.”
—Josephus, Against Apion 2.39 §282 (c. AD 100, Loeb)

Philo of Alexandria, a Jewish philosopher writing in Alexandria under Emperor Caligula, echoes the same picture:

“Countless myriads of Jews are in every region of the inhabited world — in Europe, in Asia, in Libya, on the mainland, in the islands, on the coasts, and in the interior.”
—Philo, Embassy to Gaius §281 (c. AD 41, Loeb)

By some estimates, Jews made up 7–10% of the empire — millions of people. Their greatest concentration lay along the eastern frontier bordering Parthia, Rome’s most dangerous rival. Jewish loyalty meant security on that frontier, which explains why Caesar was so eager to secure their support.


4. Caesar’s Decrees in Favor of the Jews (47–44 BC)

Julius Caesar did not merely thank the Jews with kind words; he issued a series of formal decrees guaranteeing their freedoms across the empire. Josephus preserves these in Antiquities 14, showing just how far Caesar was willing to go to secure Jewish loyalty.

Sabbath protection:

“It is not permitted to bring them before the tribunals on the Sabbath day, nor to require them to bear arms or to march, or to labor, on the Sabbath day.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.10.6 §213 (Loeb)

Right of assembly and sacred offerings:

“They shall be permitted to assemble together according to their ancestral laws and ordinances, and to do so unhindered… They shall not be required to pay taxes on the sacred money which they send to Jerusalem, nor on their sacred offerings.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 14.10.8 §§213–216 (Loeb)

Provincial enforcement: Caesar repeated these protections in letters to governors in Asia Minor and Cyrene, instructing them to allow the Jews “to observe their own laws, and to enjoy the sacred money they collect for Jerusalem.”
Antiquities 14.10.8 §§223–225; 14.10.10 §235

Together these decrees formed nothing less than a charter of Jewish privilege under Rome. Judaism was legally recognized, protected from interference, and granted rights unmatched by most other groups in the empire.


5. Rome’s Respect for Ancient Religions

The Roman attitude toward religion explains why Caesar’s decrees carried such weight. Romans admired what was ancient and distrusted what was new.

Pliny the Elder (c. AD 77):

“All true religion belongs to the past; bringing in new gods is an act of impiety.”
Natural History 30.11 (adapted from Loeb)

Tacitus (c. AD 100):

“Whatever their origin, the practices of the Jews are sanctioned by their antiquity.”
Histories 5.5 (Loeb)

Judaism thrived under Rome’s protection precisely because of its antiquity. Christianity, however, was new — and therefore suspect. The seeds of future persecution were already planted.


6. How the Romans Could Call a Man Divine

The Romans were practical in how they thought about the gods. To them, divinity was not about moral perfection but about power and benefaction. A god was one who brought victory in war, prosperity in peace, or protection to a city.

This is why Julius Caesar, after his assassination and cremation, was declared a god by the Senate in 42 BC. From then on he was known as Divus Julius — the Divine Julius.

Several competing stories circulated about how Caesar became divine:

  • The comet sign: “During the games which his heir Augustus gave in honor of Venus, a comet shone for seven successive days, rising about the eleventh hour, and was thought to be the soul of Caesar received among the gods.”
    —Suetonius, Julius Caesar 88.1 (c. AD 120, Loeb)
  • A vision of Caesar’s likeness: “Some men believed that after his death he had risen to the ranks of the gods, not only because a likeness of him was seen by certain men in the Forum a few days later…”
    —Suetonius, Julius Caesar 88.1 (c. AD 120, Loeb)
  • The poetic legend of Venus: “She [Venus] snatched him from the flames of the pyre and bore him up among the stars. … A fiery star shone in the sky and was believed to be the soul of Caesar.”
    —Ovid, Metamorphoses 15.745–851 (c. AD 8, Loeb)

This was not unique to Caesar. Centuries earlier, Rome’s founder Romulus (ruled 753–716 BC) was said to have vanished in a thunderstorm. The traditions conflict: some said he was murdered and torn apart by the jealous senators, others that he was taken up to heaven in the storm, and still others that he appeared to a senator afterwards.

Livy, writing centuries later under Augustus, preserves all these strands:

“The suspicion of the commons was that the senators had murdered Romulus; and in fact that rumor gained ground, darkly and vaguely at first, then even openly, because the king had been torn limb from limb by the hands of the senators. Others thought he had been taken up to heaven. … Then one man, Proculus Julius, declared that Romulus appeared to him at dawn and bade him tell the Romans that he was to be worshiped as a god, Quirinus.”
—Livy, History of Rome 1.16.4–7 (c. 25 BC, Loeb)

Notice the gap: Romulus’ supposed “ascension” was placed in the 8th century BC, but the first surviving detailed narrative comes from Livy in the 1st century BC — over 700 years later. By then, multiple contradictory versions of the story were already circulating.

These examples set a pattern: Roman “ascensions” were tied to political needs, celestial signs, and visionary claims. In sharp contrast, the Christian claim was that Jesus rose bodily from the grave and was seen by many witnesses. The apostles staked their lives on this testimony.


7. Augustus: The Divine Son (27 BC–AD 14)

After Caesar’s death, his adopted son Octavian became Caesar Augustus, the first emperor. He carried forward his father’s legacy of divinity and used it to establish a new political order.

Augustus as “Son of a God”

When Julius Caesar was declared divine, Augustus styled himself as Divi FiliusSon of the Divine Julius.

  • Suetonius (c. AD 120): “He gave orders that he should be called ‘son of a god.’”
    Augustus 94.1 (Loeb)

Coins across the empire bore DIVI F(ILIUS), declaring Augustus as “Son of God.” Coins were not neutral objects — they were deliberate propaganda. Every transaction carried the emperor’s titles and reminded subjects of his divine claims.

Augustus as “Savior” and “Lord”

The Priene Inscription (9 BC) celebrated Augustus in exalted terms:

“Since Providence… has filled Augustus with virtue so that he might benefit mankind, sending him as a Savior (sōtēr) both for us and for our descendants, that he might end war and arrange all things… The birthday of the god Augustus was the beginning for the world of the good tidings (euangelion) that have come through him.”
—OGIS 458

Rome proclaimed Augustus as Savior, Lord, and bringer of good news. The word used here, euangelion, is the very same word our Bibles translate as gospel.

Mark’s Gospel opens with a deliberate counter-claim:

“The beginning of the gospel (euangelion) of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.”
—Mark 1:1

Luke emphasizes the same with the angel’s words to the shepherds:

“I bring you good news (euangelion) of great joy… for unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”
—Luke 2:10–11

The gospel writers deliberately used the empire’s vocabulary and flipped it: what Caesar claimed, Jesus fulfilled.

Augustus in His Own Words

In his Res Gestae, Augustus reflected on his reign:

“After I had extinguished civil wars… I excelled all in influence… The senate consecrated me as a god.”
Res Gestae §§34–35 (Loeb)

Augustus in the Provinces

Dio Cassius records the spread of emperor worship:

“The Greeks, though they had received many benefits from him, did not at first readily worship him as a god; but when they were commanded to do so they obeyed. In Asia and Bithynia temples were built to him jointly with Rome.”
Roman History 51.20 (c. AD 210, Loeb)

Jesus Under Augustus

Jesus was born while Herod the Great still ruled Judea as Rome’s client king. Since Herod died in 4 BC, most historians date Jesus’ birth to about 6 BC.

That means Jesus’ entire childhood and youth unfolded under Augustus’ reign. When Augustus died in AD 14, Jesus was about twenty years old. He grew up in a world saturated with Augustus’ titles: Son of God, Savior, Lord, and bringer of good news.

The Gospels’ proclamation of Jesus as Lord and Savior was not safe religious talk — it was a direct challenge to Rome’s imperial ideology.


8. Herod the Great and His Cruelties (37–4 BC)

Into this imperial world came Herod the Great, Rome’s client king in Judea from 37 BC until his death in 4 BC. Herod combined ambitious building projects with relentless paranoia and brutality.

Josephus paints Herod as a man who killed to protect his throne:

“He did not spare even his nearest relatives, but slew his wife’s grandfather Hyrcanus, her brother, her mother, and finally his wife herself, and three of his sons.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 17.6.1 §191 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

“His whole life was a continual scene of murder; and while he inflicted unspeakable miseries upon his subjects, he was at the same time the victim of endless terrors and suspicions.”
—Josephus, War 1.33.6 §659 (c. AD 75, Loeb)

Even Augustus, his patron, couldn’t resist a dark joke about Herod’s cruelty:

“Augustus used to say that it was better to be Herod’s pig (hûs) than his son (huios), since he refrained from killing pigs, but he put his sons to death.”
—Suetonius, Tiberius 76.3 (c. AD 120, Loeb)

The Slaughter of the Innocents

Matthew records another act consistent with Herod’s character:

“Then Herod, when he saw that he had been tricked by the wise men, became furious, and he sent and killed all the male children in Bethlehem and in all that region who were two years old or under.”
—Matthew 2:16

Some modern critics question this because Josephus doesn’t mention it. But Josephus focuses on political and military events. Compared to the executions of Herod’s own sons, the killing of children in a small village may not have reached his threshold for inclusion. For Matthew, however, it carried theological weight as a fulfillment of prophecy.

The Death of Hyrcanus II

Among Herod’s victims was Hyrcanus II — the same high priest who had once supplied troops to Julius Caesar and been confirmed by him as ethnarch. His later execution by Herod highlights the irony of Judea’s situation: loyalty to Rome could not guarantee safety under a paranoid client king.


9. The Revolt at Herod’s Death (4 BC)

When Herod died in 4 BC, chaos broke out in Judea and Galilee. For Rome, nothing mattered more than the Pax Romana — the Roman peace. All privileges, decrees, and favors that groups like the Jews had enjoyed could be negated or ignored the moment they violated that peace. Rome’s highest priority was order.

Even before Herod’s death, unrest was simmering. Some young men tore down the golden eagle Herod had placed on the Temple gate, regarding it as idolatrous. Herod had them burned alive:

“Some young men, students of the Law, pulled down the golden eagle which Herod had placed over the great gate of the Temple, supposing it to be against the Law; and they were punished by being burned alive.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 17.6.2 §149 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

When Herod died soon after, disorder broke out on a massive scale:

“There were at this time ten thousand other disorders in Judea. … Many hoped for a change in affairs.”
—Josephus, War 2.2.3 §4 (c. AD 75, Loeb)

During the next Passover, an immense crowd gathered in Jerusalem. Archelaus, Herod’s son and successor, tried to calm them, but when the unrest escalated, he unleashed the army:

“At the feast of unleavened bread, which the Jews call Passover, an immense multitude came together from all Judea. … The people were so inflamed that Archelaus was forced to send in the whole army; and about three thousand of the people were slain.”
—Josephus, War 2.1.3 §§10–13 (c. AD 75, Loeb)

Finally, the Roman governor Publius Quinctilius Varus arrived with legions. His suppression was merciless:

“Varus sent his whole army into the villages of Judea, and when they had taken them, they put them to the torch. … He crucified about two thousand of the rebels.”
—Josephus, War 2.5.2 §§68–75 (c. AD 75, Loeb)

The sight of 2,000 crosses lining the roads of Judea left a lasting memory. Jesus would have been a small child — about two years old — when this revolt broke out. His earliest years were lived in a land marked by bloodshed, fear, and Rome’s determination to preserve its peace at all costs.


10. The Census and Judas the Galilean (AD 6)

After Herod’s son Archelaus was deposed, Judea was placed under direct Roman rule in AD 6. Caesar Augustus ordered a census for taxation, conducted under Quirinius, governor of Syria. This is the same registration Luke mentions in his Gospel account of Jesus’ birth.

Luke records the event (and ties it to Bethlehem):

“In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration when Quirinius was governor of Syria. … And Joseph went up to Bethlehem … to be registered with Mary, who was with child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son…
—Luke 2:1–2, 4–7

Josephus describes the AD 6 census in detail:

“Quirinius, a Roman senator … came himself into Judea, with Coponius, a man of the equestrian order, who had the power of life and death put into his hands by Caesar. … Quirinius also came to take an account of their substance.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.1–2 §§1–2 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

A Galilean named Judas (of Gamala) rose in revolt against the census:

“Judas, a Gaulonite from a city whose name was Gamala … prevailed with his countrymen to revolt, and said they were cowards if they would endure to pay a tax to the Romans and would, after God, submit to mortal men as their lords.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.6 §23 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

Josephus explains that Judas founded a fourth branch of Jewish philosophy:

“This Judas was the author of a fourth branch of Jewish philosophy … They have an inviolable attachment to liberty and say that God is to be their only Ruler and Lord.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.6 §23 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

To clarify Josephus’ taxonomy, the three other groups were:

  • Pharisees — the largest group, popular among the people, believed in angels, resurrection, and both fate and free will.
  • Sadducees — the priestly aristocracy, denied resurrection and angels, emphasized free will, rejected oral tradition.
  • Essenes — a separatist group, communal in lifestyle, practicing ritual purity and strict discipline (often celibate).
  • Zealots (Fourth Philosophy) — founded by Judas the Galilean, agreeing with Pharisees in many points but insisting that God alone is ruler and lord, fiercely committed to liberty, and ready to die rather than submit to Rome.

Josephus sums up the significance:

“This was the beginning of great disturbances.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.8 §27 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

But Rome acted swiftly:

“Quirinius subdued their attempt at innovation immediately, and the nation was at peace.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 18.1.1 §4 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

And Josephus records Judas’ fate:

“Judas the Galilean was the author of this sedition… but he was destroyed, and his followers were dispersed.”
—Josephus, War 2.8.1 §§117–118 (c. AD 75, Loeb)

The uprising was crushed, Judas perished, and his followers scattered.

At this time Jesus was about twelve years old. He grew up in Galilee, the very region where Judas’ revolt began, and the stories of Rome’s crucifixions and suppression would have been seared into local memory.


11. Rome Never Forgets (AD 46–48)

Rome never forgot. Decades later, the long arm of Roman vengeance reached Judas’ family:

“Two of his sons, James and Simon, were captured, and Alexander the governor gave orders for them to be crucified.”
—Josephus, Antiquities 20.5.2 §102 (c. AD 93, Loeb)

That execution took place around AD 46–48, nearly forty years after the census revolt. By that time:

  • Jesus had already been crucified and raised.
  • The church was spreading in Judea.
  • Paul’s First Missionary Journey (AD 47–48; Acts 13–14) was beginning.

Rome’s message was unmistakable: rebellion may be crushed in a day, but the empire’s justice would reach even to the children of rebels. For Rome, the Pax Romana was all that mattered.


12. Other Provinces Resist Rome

It is important to note Judea was not the only province to resist taxation and Roman rule. Tacitus records several examples:

“The Gauls … declared they were being reduced to slavery under the guise of a census and taxation.”
—Tacitus, Annals 3.40 (c. AD 115, Loeb)

And again:

“The Britons, outraged by abuses and tribute, rose in fury to throw off the Roman yoke.”
—Tacitus, Annals 14.31 (c. AD 115, Loeb)

But for the Jews, taxation was not only political slavery; it was also a theological affront. To pay tribute to Caesar was to acknowledge him as lord — something Jews and certain Jewish sects refused to do, which made their resistance both political and religious.


13. The Luke/Acts Contradictions and the Skeptical Critique

In Session 1 we introduced one of the main tactics of skeptical scholars: pointing out contradictions and inconsistencies. Here we face two of the most significant — one between the Gospels themselves, and one between Luke/Acts and Josephus.

Luke vs. Matthew: The Birth of Jesus

Luke 2:1–2, 4–7

“In those days a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration when Quirinius was governor of Syria. … And Joseph went up to Bethlehem … to be registered with Mary, who was with child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son…

Matthew 2:1

“Now after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king…”

  • Luke ties Jesus’ birth to the census under Quirinius (AD 6).
  • Matthew ties Jesus’ birth to Herod the Great (d. 4 BC).

This creates about a ten-year gap between the two Gospel accounts.

And remember: Mark and John don’t even mention Jesus’ birth or childhood at all. Two Gospels give nativity accounts — and they differ; two Gospels skip it entirely.


Luke/Acts vs. Josephus: Theudas and Judas

Acts 5:36–37

“For before these days Theudas rose up, claiming to be somebody… After him Judas the Galilean rose up in the days of the census and drew away some of the people after him. He too perished, and all who followed him were scattered.”

  • Acts: Theudas came first; Judas later “in the days of the census.”
  • Josephus: Judas’ revolt was at the census of AD 6 (Antiquities 18.1.6–8). Theudas was much later, under Cuspius Fadus (AD 44–46, Antiquities 20.97–98).

This means Acts and Josephus present opposite orders for Judas and Theudas.


Why This Does Not Threaten Our Faith

Yes — the contradictions are real. But here’s the crucial point: this does not threaten our faith. It actually strengthens it.

  • These differences show that the Gospels, Acts, and Josephus are independent witnesses. If they matched perfectly, skeptics would cry collusion.
  • The biblical authors’ goal was never flawless Roman chronology. Their goal was to place Jesus’ story in the real world of Caesars, governors, and revolts — and to proclaim his death and resurrection.

The Core Message of “First Importance”

Paul tells us what matters most in 1 Corinthians 15:3–10 — a passage every historian, even skeptics, recognizes as one of the earliest Christian creeds:

“For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received:
that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures,
that he was buried,
that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures,
and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the Twelve.
Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep.
Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles.
Last of all, as to one untimely born, he appeared also to me.
For I am the least of the apostles, unworthy to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God.
But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me.

Notice: Paul not only passes on the creed, he adds his personal testimony — he was transformed by seeing the risen Christ, from persecutor to apostle, and he says he “worked harder than all of them” because the grace of God was alive in him.


The Gospels’ Emphasis on the Cross and Resurrection

The gospel writers give the same priority. Just look at how much space they devote to Jesus’ final week and his death:

Gospel% of Book on Last WeekWhere Focus Begins% of Book from That PointNotes
Matthew36% (ch. 21–28)Ch. 16 (“Sign of Jonah,” passion predictions)51% (ch. 16–28)Over one-third on last week; more than half from 16 onward.
Mark34% (ch. 11–16)Ch. 8 (first passion prediction)55% (ch. 8–16)No birth story; jumps straight to Jesus’ ministry.
Luke27% (ch. 19–24)Ch. 9 (Jesus sets his face toward Jerusalem)65% (ch. 9–24)Includes a nativity, but two-thirds is about Jesus’ death.
John39% (ch. 12–21)From the very start (“Lamb of God,” 1:29; “Destroy this temple,” 2:19)100%No nativity story; the entire Gospel is oriented to the cross and resurrection.

Acts: In every major sermon, the focus is on Jesus’ death and resurrection as the heart of the message.


Of First Importance

So yes — the contradictions are real. Luke and Matthew do not line up on Jesus’ birth. Luke/Acts and Josephus do not line up on Theudas and Judas. Even Luke himself doesn’t smooth over every detail between his Gospel and Acts.

But far from undermining our faith, this strengthens it. It proves these are independent witnesses. And despite differences in detail, they all converge on the one testimony Paul calls “of first importance”:

  • Jesus lived.
  • He was crucified under Rome.
  • He was buried.
  • He was raised.
  • He appeared to many.
  • His followers were transformed — Peter the denier, James the skeptic, Paul the persecutor — and they worked, suffered, and even died rather than deny what they had seen.

This is the gospel. This is what matters. This is what still changes lives.


14. Conclusion

From Julius Caesar’s decrees to Augustus’ divine titles, from Herod’s paranoia to Varus’ mass crucifixions, from Judas the Galilean’s revolt to Rome’s long memory — the world into which Jesus was born was dominated by imperial propaganda, oppressive taxation, and violent suppression.

Jesus was a toddler when Varus crucified 2,000 rebels (4 BC). He was twelve years old when Judas the Galilean sparked a revolt over the census (AD 6). Judas’ sons were crucified in AD 46–48, as the church spread and Paul began his first missionary journey.

And through it all, the independent voices of Paul, the Gospels, Acts, and even Josephus converge: Jesus lived, was crucified, was buried, was raised, and appeared. His followers were transformed — Peter, James, Paul above all — and they gave their lives rather than deny what they had seen.

So when the first Christians proclaimed Jesus as Lord and Savior, they were not using safe religious words. They were confronting Caesar’s claims and Rome’s power with the one truth that could never be crucified: Christ is risen.

Multiplying by Mission: Session 2 at Mission Lake

40% Growth Then, 5% Growth Now — What We Must Learn Anew

1. Review from Session 1

Last week we saw that even atheist and skeptical scholars agree on seven undisputed letters of Paul. These are the earliest Christian writings we possess, and they form the backbone of our historical knowledge of the first generation of the church. But that raises a crucial question: Can we be confident that the words we read in these letters today are the same words Paul actually wrote? Before we move forward in the Roman timeline, we need to look closely at how these letters were preserved.

2. Comparing Paul to Other Ancient Authors

When we compare the manuscript tradition of Paul’s letters with other works from antiquity, the results are striking:

AuthorWorkDate WrittenEarliest CopyTime Gap
JosephusJewish War75–79 AD9th century~800 years
TacitusAnnals~100 AD~850 AD~750 years
Pliny the YoungerLetters~100–112 AD~850 AD~750 years
SuetoniusLives of the Caesars~121 AD9th century~700–800 yrs
Paul the Apostle7 Undisputed Letters48–64 AD~175–200 AD (P46)~125–150 yrs

Historians accept Josephus, Tacitus, Pliny, and Suetonius without hesitation, despite enormous gaps between the originals and our earliest copies. Yet Paul’s letters — with the shortest gap of all — are often treated with suspicion. That double standard says more about modern skepticism than it does about the evidence.

3. What Manuscripts Do We Actually Have?

When we talk about manuscripts here, remember: we are focusing only on the seven undisputed letters of Paul (Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon). If we were counting the entire New Testament, the totals would be much larger.

Approximate counts by language for these seven letters:

  • Greek: ~900 manuscripts.
  • Latin: 3,000–4,000+ manuscripts.
  • Coptic: 200–300 manuscripts.
  • Syriac: 200–300 manuscripts.
  • Other languages (Armenian, Gothic, Ethiopic, etc.): ~500 combined.
    (By comparison, the entire New Testament is supported by over 5,800 Greek manuscripts, 10,000+ Latin, and another 10,000+ in other languages. But here our lens stays on the seven letters.)

Bart Ehrman, an agnostic scholar, concedes:

“We have more manuscripts of the New Testament than any other book from antiquity—many thousands. And many of these manuscripts date from quite early times.” (Misquoting Jesus, 2005, p. 88)

The Earliest Manuscript: P46

Papyrus 46 (P46), dated AD 175–225, is one of the earliest and most important witnesses to the seven undisputed letters. Originally 104 leaves; 86 survive.

Contents include:

  • Romans 5:17–16:27 (Romans 1–5:16 missing)
  • 1 Corinthians 1:1–15:58 (chapter 16 missing)
  • 2 Corinthians 1:1–9:6 (chapters 9:7–13:13 missing)
  • Galatians: fully preserved
  • Philippians: fully preserved
  • 1 Thessalonians: fully preserved
  • Philemon: likely in the missing final leaves
  • Also present: Hebrews, Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians.

This shows that by around AD 200, less than 150 years after Paul’s death, his letters were already being circulated as a collection, copied and bound together.

Manuscripts Between 200 and 325 AD

Other papyri confirm copying before the great codices:

  • P30 (c. 225–250): 1 Thessalonians 4:12–5:18.
  • P65 (c. 200–250): 1 Thessalonians 1:3–2:13.
  • P87 (c. 250–300): Philemon 13–15, 24–25.

These show that Paul’s letters were copied across regions before Constantine.

The Great Codices (after 325 AD)

  • Codex Vaticanus (c. 325–350): Preserves nearly the whole NT. Missing are 1–2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, part of Hebrews, Revelation. Most likely due to physical loss.
  • Codex Sinaiticus (c. 330–360): Contains all 7 undisputed letters.

Though copied in different regions, they strongly agree with earlier papyri like P46.

Earliest Translations

  • Old Latin: The Freisinger Fragment (VL 64, late 2nd or early 3rd c.) preserves Romans 15:3–13.
  • Coptic (Sahidic): Papyrus Bodmer XIX (early 3rd c.) preserves Romans 1:1–2:3; 3:21–4:8; 5:8–13; 6:1–19.
  • Syriac: By the early 4th c., Paul’s letters circulated in Syriac. Aphrahat (c. 280–345) quotes them; the Peshitta included them.

So within 200–300 years of Paul’s life, his letters were available in Greek, Latin, Coptic, and Syriac.

4. What About Textual Variants?

For the seven undisputed letters, scholars count 7,000–8,000 variants. If we included the NT as a whole, the number would be much higher.

Most are trivial.

“Most of the textual changes in our manuscripts are completely insignificant.” (Ehrman, Misquoting Jesus, 2005, p. 208)

Examples of insignificant variants:

  • Romans 12:11 — “Serve the Lord” vs. “Serve the Spirit.”
  • Galatians 1:3 — “God our Father” vs. “God the Father.”

The Five Most Significant Variants in the Undisputed Letters

1. Romans 8:1
Short: “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”
Long: “… who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.”
The longer phrase is almost certainly borrowed from verse 4 — a case of scribal harmonization. Either way, the chapter teaches both truths: freedom from condemnation and Spirit-led living.

2. 1 Thessalonians 2:7
“We were gentle among you” (ēpioi).
“We were like children among you” (nēpioi).
The difference hangs on a single Greek letter (eta vs. nu). Both readings make sense in context: Paul could be stressing either his gentleness or his childlike humility toward the Thessalonians.

3. Galatians 2:12
With the phrase: “… before certain men came from James…”
Without the phrase: “… before certain men came…”
Some manuscripts omit “from James,” likely to soften the perceived conflict between Paul and the Jerusalem leadership. The confrontation with Peter remains central in either reading.

4. 1 Corinthians 14:34–35
“Women should keep silent in the churches. For they are not permitted to speak, but should be in submission, as the Law also says. If there is anything they desire to learn, let them ask their husbands at home. For it is shameful for a woman to speak in church.”

  • In some manuscripts, these verses appear after verse 33.
  • In others, they are moved after verse 40.
  • In several, scribes marked the passage with symbols, signaling doubt about its original location.

This passage also creates tension with 1 Corinthians 11:5, where Paul assumes women are praying and prophesying aloud. Some scholars think the verses were originally a marginal note that later entered the text. Regardless, scribes preserved them — they did not erase what they weren’t sure about.

5. Romans 5:1
“We have peace with God…” (echomen, indicative).
“Let us have peace with God…” (echōmen, subjunctive).
A single vowel changes the sense from statement to exhortation. Both are ancient readings, and both are consistent with Paul’s theology — either declaring peace as a fact or urging believers to live in that peace.

Conclusion on Variants: Variants are real, but they are not a threat. None overturn Paul’s teaching. Our faith does not rest on the exact form of a single word — it rests on the total message Paul delivered about Christ. And that message comes through with clarity across the manuscript tradition.

5. Internal Evidence from Paul’s Own Letters

Even within the NT, Paul’s letters show awareness of being circulated and read widely:

  • 1 Corinthians 1:2 — “…with all those who in every place call on the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, both their Lord and ours.”
  • 2 Corinthians 1:1 — “…with all the saints who are in the whole of Achaia.”
  • Galatians 1:2 — “…to the churches of Galatia.”
  • 2 Corinthians 10:10 — “‘His letters are weighty and strong, but his bodily presence is weak, and his speech of no account.’”
    Even Paul’s opponents recognized his “letters” (plural) as influential.

But the most striking evidence comes from 2 Peter 3:15–16:

“And count the patience of our Lord as salvation, just as our beloved brother Paul also wrote to you according to the wisdom given him, as he does in all his letters when he speaks in them of these matters. There are some things in them that are hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other Scriptures.”

This is extraordinary. The text not only names Paul directly, but refers to “all his letters” — a collection already known to the wider church — and explicitly places them alongside “the other Scriptures.”

The question then becomes: when was 2 Peter written?

  • If it is genuine (written by Peter before his martyrdom in AD 64), then Paul was still alive at the time, and his letters were already being gathered and treated as Scripture while he was still writing them. Notice the Greek verbs: Peter says Paul “wrote” (past tense) but also “he speaks” (present tense) in his letters, suggesting Paul was still actively writing. This would also imply that Peter himself, an Aramaic-speaking Jew, likely worked through a secretary (an amanuensis) to produce a polished Greek letter, as was common. Peter explicitly mentions Silvanus serving this role in 1 Peter 5:12. If Silvanus could serve for 1 Peter, then another amanuensis could easily explain the high-quality Greek of 2 Peter.
  • If it is not genuine but an early 2nd-century pseudepigraphon, it still proves that by that time Paul’s letters were being universally read and revered as Scripture. A forger could not have successfully passed off such a claim unless the churches already accepted Paul’s writings as Scripture and already knew them as a collection.

Either way, the conclusion is the same: 2 Peter 3:15–16 gives us decisive evidence that Paul’s letters were recognized as authoritative Scripture very early — whether during Paul’s own lifetime or within a generation after his death.

6. Early Christian Witness (95–180 AD)

Clement of Rome (c. 95 AD):

“Take up the epistle of the blessed Paul the Apostle. What did he write to you at the time when the Gospel first began to be preached? Truly, he wrote to you in the Spirit concerning himself, and Cephas, and Apollos, because even then you had formed parties.” (1 Clement 47)

Clement writes as if the Corinthians still physically possessed Paul’s letter — either the original or a faithful copy preserved in their church. His command to “take it up” makes no sense otherwise. Clement himself was also clearly familiar with the letter, meaning he too had access to a copy in Rome. Within one generation of Paul, his letters were present in multiple churches, available for reference and correction.

Ignatius of Antioch (c. 110 AD):

“You are associates in the mysteries with Paul, who was sanctified, who gained a good report, who is right blessed, in whose footsteps may I be found when I attain to God, who in every letter makes mention of you in Christ Jesus.” (To the Ephesians 12.2)

Ignatius assumes that the Ephesian Christians knew Paul’s letters well — they had them in their possession, whether in original form or in copies kept in the church. Ignatius himself had also read them, since he confidently appeals to “every letter” Paul wrote. This shows that by the early 2nd century Paul’s writings were already circulating widely and were accessible to multiple communities at the same time.

Polycarp of Smyrna (c. 110–140 AD):

“And when he was absent, he wrote you letters, which, if you study them, you will be able to build yourselves up in the faith that has been given you.” (To the Philippians 3.2)

Polycarp presumes that the Philippians still had Paul’s letters in their possession — originals or faithful copies carefully preserved in the church. And Polycarp himself had clearly read them too, since he urges them to “study” what he also knew. The fact that he treats these writings as ongoing sources of instruction shows they were viewed not as temporary notes but as enduring Scripture.

Theophilus of Antioch (c. 180 AD):

“And in another place, Paul says: ‘If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you shall be saved.’” (To Autolycus 3.14, citing Romans 10:9)

Theophilus directly cites Paul’s words and calls them Scripture. This shows that by the late 2nd century Paul’s letters were not only preserved but already recognized as carrying the authority of the Word of God.

Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 180 AD):

“And Paul, too, says: ‘There is one God, the Father, who is above all, and through all, and in us all.’ And again, ‘There is one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him.’” (Against Heresies 3.12.12, citing 1 Corinthians 8:6)

Across Against Heresies, Irenaeus cites all seven undisputed Pauline letters — Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, and Philemon. He names Paul explicitly, weaving his words into theological arguments, treating them as binding Scripture. Irenaeus knew them; the churches he wrote to knew them; and he expected his readers to recognize the authority of Paul’s letters immediately.

7. Reconstructing Paul’s Letters from Quotations

Between Clement of Rome (c. 95 AD) and Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 180 AD), every one of Paul’s seven undisputed letters is quoted or referenced. Even if all manuscripts had been lost, the content of Paul’s letters could still be reconstructed from these citations.

It is true that the Fathers sometimes paraphrased or quoted from memory, so not every line would be preserved word-for-word. But the essential message, theology, and teaching of Paul is fully present.

Bart Ehrman’s central challenge is this: since our earliest manuscript of Paul’s letters (P46) comes from around AD 175–225, how can we know the text was copied accurately in the first 100–150 years?

Ehrman himself concedes the point this way:

“Strictly speaking we can never know anything like this with 100% certainty. … we can’t know with absolute complete certainty what was said in each and every passage of the NT. … But that doesn’t mean that we cannot know with relative certainty what is said in most parts of the New Testament.” (The Accuracy of Paul’s Letter to the Galatians, ehrmanblog.org)

We agree: we cannot have mathematical certainty. We do not have the originals. There were surely variants in the earliest copies, maybe even more than in later ones. But the evidence we do have shows the same pattern century after century: variants exist, but they rarely affect meaning, and none change the core of Paul’s message.

And the positive case is strong:

  • The time gap between Paul’s writing and our earliest surviving copies is remarkably short compared to other ancient works that historians accept without hesitation.
  • The number of manuscripts is massive and unparalleled, giving us a wide base of comparison.
  • The variants that do appear rarely affect meaning, and none overturn any core doctrine of the Christian faith.
  • The writings of the Church Fathers confirm stability, since every one of Paul’s letters is quoted by the end of the 2nd century, providing an independent line of evidence alongside the manuscripts.
  • Most importantly, there is no plausible way the text could have been altered wholesale. By the end of the 2nd century, Paul’s letters had been copied and carried across the Roman world — from Rome to Corinth, from Antioch to Alexandria, from Asia Minor to North Africa. They were quoted in Greek, translated into Latin, Coptic, and Syriac, and cited by leaders as far apart as Clement in Rome, Ignatius in Syria, and Irenaeus in Gaul. To change Paul’s words in any significant way, someone would have had to gather up every copy, alter them in exactly the same fashion, and redistribute them across dozens of cities and multiple languages — without leaving any trace of disagreement. That never happened. The geographic spread of manuscripts and quotations itself is evidence of the stability of the text.

Taken together, this evidence shows that what we read in Paul’s letters today is the same message the earliest Christians received, studied, and preserved as Scripture.

8. Canon Lists and Heretical Canons

The Muratorian Fragment (c. 170–200 AD)

“As to the epistles of Paul, they themselves make clear to those desiring to understand which ones they are. First of all, he wrote to the Corinthians, addressing them in two letters. Then to the Ephesians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians, to the Galatians, to the Thessalonians — twice, and to the Romans. It is plain that he wrote these letters for the sake of instruction. There is yet another addressed to Philemon, one to Titus, and two to Timothy in affection and love. These are held sacred in the esteem of the Church and form part of the universal Church’s discipline and teaching.” (Muratorian Canon, lines 47–59)

The Muratorian list is the earliest surviving canon catalog. It carefully names nearly every Pauline letter — including all seven undisputed ones — and defends them as “sacred” and as part of the “universal Church’s discipline.” By around AD 180, Paul’s letters were not only being read but were already being formally recognized and defended as Scripture.

Marcion’s Canon (c. 140 AD)

Marcion, a heretic who rejected the Old Testament and much of Christianity, still accepted Paul as the true apostle. His canon included ten Pauline letters.

Ehrman comments:

“Marcion’s canon shows that the letters of Paul were already being collected and circulated as a group by the early second century.” (Lost Christianities, 2003, p. 104)

Even heresy confirms Paul’s letters were a recognized collection.

9. John’s Long Life

Irenaeus testifies that John lived until the reign of Trajan (Against Heresies 3.1.1). If John was a young man when he followed Jesus, he could have lived well into his 80s or 90s — stretching the apostolic witness into the closing years of the 1st century and the dawn of the 2nd.

Richard Bauckham notes:

“The Beloved Disciple… may well have been quite young during Jesus’ ministry. This possibility makes good sense of the tradition that he lived to extreme old age.” (Jesus and the Eyewitnesses, 2006, p. 390)

Even Bart Ehrman acknowledges:

“It is certainly possible—indeed plausible—that John was very young when he followed Jesus, which would help explain the later traditions about his longevity.” (How Jesus Became God, 2014, p. 124)

John’s long life bridged the gap between the first generation of apostles and the church of the 2nd century, anchoring the transmission of apostolic teaching.

10. Conclusion to Part 1

By the end of the 2nd century, Paul’s letters were:

  • Collected together in manuscripts like P46.
  • Quoted extensively by church leaders across the empire.
  • Preserved faithfully despite persecution.
  • Formally recognized in canon lists.
  • Respected even by heretics who tried to twist them.

The earliest Christians treated Paul’s writings not as casual correspondence but as sacred Scripture. They copied them carefully, spread them across the empire, quoted them as authoritative, and defended them in the face of challenges.

We do not have the originals. We cannot claim 100% certainty on every word. But the evidence — manuscripts, variants, patristic quotations, canon lists, and the geographic spread of witnesses — gives us extraordinary confidence that the letters we read today are the same message the earliest Christians received and preserved: the gospel of Christ through His apostle Paul.


Julius Caesar and the Jews

Now that we have seen why we can trust the preservation of Paul’s letters, we can step back into the wider Roman world where Christianity was born. To understand the setting of Jesus’ life and the early church, we begin with Julius Caesar and the unique place of the Jewish people in the empire.

1. Jewish Support for Julius Caesar (47–44 BC)

The Jews were not a marginal group in Caesar’s world — they were a significant presence across the Mediterranean, and their loyalty mattered.

During Caesar’s campaign in Egypt around 47 BC, Antipater, the father of Herod the Great, brought 3,000 Jewish troops to aid him:

“When Caesar had settled the affairs of Syria, he made his expedition against Egypt… Antipater brought three thousand armed men, partly Jews and partly foreigners. This force was very helpful to Caesar.” (Antiquities 14.8.1 §190)

Not long after, during Caesar’s campaign in Asia against Parthian-aligned forces, another 3,000 Jews under Hyrcanus II, the high priest, rallied to his side:

“The Jews in Asia also came to his assistance, being about three thousand armed men, and joined themselves to him. They did this, not only out of the goodwill they bore him, but also by the command of Hyrcanus the high priest, who at that time was in great friendship with Caesar.” (Antiquities 14.10.22 §295)

And when Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC, the Jews demonstrated their devotion in a way that astonished Roman observers:

“The Jews also mourned for him, and they even crowded about his house for many nights together bewailing their loss.” (Antiquities 14.10.1 §213)

The picture is consistent: the Jews fought for Caesar in Egypt, aided him in Asia against the Parthian threat, and grieved deeply at his assassination. Caesar, in turn, rewarded them richly and secured their privileges in the empire.

2. Size of the Jewish Population (1st century BC–1st century AD)

Why did Caesar value Jewish loyalty so highly? Quite simply, because the Jews were numerous, organized, and strategically placed across the empire.

Josephus emphasizes their strength in Rome itself:

“As for the Jews, they had already increased in numbers so greatly that it would have been hard to expel them from the city.” (Antiquities 14.7.2 §110)

Elsewhere, he insists their influence stretched across the entire Mediterranean world:

“There is not any city of the Grecians, nor any of the barbarians, nor any nation whatsoever, whither our custom of resting on the seventh day hath not come, and by which our fasts and lighting up lamps, and many of our prohibitions as to our food, are not observed.” (Against Apion 2.39 §282)

Philo of Alexandria, writing just after the time of Jesus, painted the same picture of their global dispersion:

“Countless myriads of Jews are in every region… in Asia and Europe, in the islands and mainland, in the East and the West.” (Embassy to Gaius §281, c. AD 41)

By the 1st century AD, Jews made up an estimated 7–10% of the Roman Empire — millions of people. Their largest concentrations were along the eastern frontier near Parthia, Rome’s greatest military rival. For Caesar, Jewish loyalty meant not just local support in Judea, but stability along the empire’s most contested border.

3. Caesar’s Decrees in Favor of the Jews (47–44 BC)

Julius Caesar did not merely thank the Jews with kind words; he issued a series of formal decrees guaranteeing their freedoms across the empire. Josephus preserves several of them in Antiquities 14, showing just how far Caesar was willing to go to secure Jewish loyalty.

Sabbath protection:

“It is not permitted to bring them before the tribunals on the Sabbath day, nor to require them to bear arms or to march, or to labor, on the Sabbath day.” (Antiquities 14.10.6 §213)

Right of assembly:

“They shall be permitted to assemble together according to their ancestral laws and ordinances, and to do so unhindered.” (Antiquities 14.10.8 §216)

Exemption from temple tribute taxes:

“They shall not be required to pay taxes on the sacred money which they send to Jerusalem, nor on their sacred offerings.” (Antiquities 14.10.8 §§213–216)

Provincial enforcement: Caesar repeated these protections in letters to governors in Asia Minor and Cyrene, instructing them to allow the Jews “to observe their own laws, and to enjoy the sacred money they collect for Jerusalem.” (Antiquities 14.10.8 §§223–225; 14.10.10 §235)

Taken together, these decrees amounted to a charter of Jewish privilege under Rome. Judaism was legally recognized, protected from interference, and granted rights unmatched by most other groups in the empire.

This made Judaism unique: an ancient religion formally safeguarded by Caesar’s laws. But it also created a problem for the future — because once Christianity emerged, the question would become: Does this new movement share in Jewish protections, or is it something new and therefore illegal?

4. Rome’s Respect for Ancient Religions

Why was Rome willing to tolerate the Jews? The answer lies in how Romans thought about religion. They admired what was old and distrusted what was new.

Pliny the Elder wrote in the 1st century AD:

“What is ancient is more holy; what is new is suspect.” (Natural History 28.3)

Tacitus, writing around 100 AD, echoed:

“Whatever their origin, the antiquity of their rites gives them credit.” (Histories 5.5)

Judaism, with its ancient laws and Scriptures, commanded a respect that protected it. Christianity, however, was seen as new — and therefore dangerous. Already, the seeds of conflict were planted.

5. Augustus: The Divine Son (27 BC–AD 14)

After Caesar’s assassination, his adopted son Octavian rose to power as Caesar Augustus. He carried his father’s legacy further, presenting himself as divine.

Suetonius records:

“He added the title ‘Son of a God’ to his name.” (Divus Augustus 94.1)

Augustus himself, in his Res Gestae (completed AD 14), boasts:

“After my death… the Senate decreed that my name should be included in the hymns of the Salii and be consecrated as a god.” (§35)

And the Priene Inscription (9 BC) celebrated him in language that should sound familiar to Christians:

“Since Providence… has filled [Augustus] with virtue so that he might benefit mankind… sending him as a Savior (sōtēr)… The birthday of the god Augustus was the beginning for the world of the good tidings (euangelion) that have come through him.” (OGIS 458)

Mark’s Gospel begins deliberately:

“The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.” (Mark 1:1)

This was not just theology. It was a direct counter-claim to Rome’s imperial ideology.

6. Herod the Great and Mass Cruelties (37–4 BC)

Into this Roman world of Caesar’s decrees and Augustus’s divine claims came Herod the Great, Rome’s client king in Judea. He ruled from 37 BC until his death in 4 BC.

Josephus paints Herod as a man driven by paranoia and ruthless violence:

“His whole life was a continual scene of bloodshed; even his own sons were not spared.” (Antiquities 17.6.5 §§191–192)

“He gave orders to kill a great number of the most illustrious men of the whole Jewish nation.” (Antiquities 17.6.5 §204)

Among Herod’s victims was Hyrcanus II, the very same high priest who had once supported Julius Caesar and had brought troops to his aid. The execution of Caesar’s old ally showed that loyalty to Rome did not guarantee survival under a client king’s suspicion.

It is in this context that Matthew records Herod’s order to slaughter the infants in Bethlehem:

“Then Herod, when he saw that he had been tricked by the wise men, became furious, and he sent and killed all the male children in Bethlehem and in all that region who were two years old or under, according to the time that he had ascertained from the wise men.” (Matthew 2:16)

Some modern critics question this account because Josephus does not mention it. But considering what Josephus does report — the executions of Herod’s own sons, the planned massacre of Jerusalem’s leaders, and his general record of bloodshed — the killing of children in a small village is tragically consistent with his character. For Josephus, who focused on political and military events, such an atrocity may not have been considered significant enough to record. For Matthew, it carried theological and prophetic weight.

This also helps us with the dating of Jesus’ birth. Since Herod died in 4 BC, and Matthew describes Jesus as up to two years old at the time of the slaughter, most historians conclude that Jesus was born around 6 BC.

When Herod died, Judea erupted in revolt. The Roman governor Publius Quinctilius Varus marched swiftly from Syria to suppress it. His response was brutal:

“Varus… crucified about two thousand of those that had been the authors of the revolt.” (Jewish War 2.5.2 §75)

The roads around Jerusalem lined with crosses, the infants of Bethlehem slaughtered at a king’s command — these were the realities of the world into which Jesus was born.

7. The Census and Judas the Galilean (AD 6)

In AD 6, Rome removed Archelaus, Herod’s son, and made Judea a Roman province under direct rule. A census for taxation was ordered.

Josephus says:

“Coponius, a man of the equestrian order, was sent by Caesar to govern the Jews, and he had the power of life and death put into his hands by Caesar.” (Antiquities 18.1.1 §2)

A Galilean named Judas stirred rebellion:

“Judas of Galilee… said that this taxation was nothing less than slavery, and exhorted the nation to assert their liberty.” (Antiquities 18.1.6 §4)

Josephus describes their conviction:

“They say that God alone is their ruler and lord… and they do not value dying any more than living.” (Jewish War 2.8.1 §§117–118)

And he marks this moment as the beginning of a movement that would plague Rome for decades:

“This was the beginning of great disturbances.” (Antiquities 18.1.8 §27)

Jesus was about 12 years old at this time. He grew up in Galilee, the very region where Judas had raised his banner of revolt, and where memories of Rome’s response — arrests, crucifixions, suppression — were seared into the minds of families.

8. Rome Never Forgets (AD 46–48)

Rome did not forgive rebellion quickly. Even decades later, the family of Judas was hunted down. During the procuratorship of Tiberius Alexander (AD 46–48), two of Judas’s sons were captured:

“Two of his sons, James and Simon, were taken and crucified.” (Antiquities 20.5.2 §102)

This shows Rome’s long memory. Not only rebels, but their families were targeted. Even after Jesus’ crucifixion, Judas’s line was still being crucified.

9. Other Revolts, Other Crosses (1st century AD)

It is important to remember that Judea was not the only province to resist taxation. Tacitus records that in AD 21, the Gauls protested a census:

“The Gauls… declared they were being reduced to slavery under the guise of a census and taxation.” (Annals 3.40)

And in AD 60–61, the Britons under Boudica rose up violently against Rome’s abuses and tribute demands:

“The Britons… outraged by abuses and tribute, rose in fury to throw off the Roman yoke.” (Annals 14.31)

But there was a difference. For Gauls and Britons, taxation was political slavery. For Jews, taxation was also a theological affront. To pay tribute to Caesar was to confess him as lord, something only God could be. That is why resistance in Judea carried such intensity — it was not just about politics, but about worship.

10. Conclusion to Part 2

From Caesar’s decrees to Augustus’s divine titles, from Herod’s paranoia to Varus’s mass crucifixions, from Judas the Galilean’s revolt to Rome’s relentless vengeance, the Jewish world into which Jesus was born was dominated by imperial propaganda, oppressive taxation, and violent suppression.

The first Christians grew up in this environment. They knew what Rome demanded: loyalty, taxes, sacrifice, even worship. They also knew what Rome did to those who resisted: crosses by the thousands.

So when they proclaimed Jesus as Lord and Savior, they were not speaking safe religious words. They were directly challenging the claims of Caesar himself.