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Chronology of Jesus

A chronology of Jesus aims to establish a timeline for the events of the life of Jesus the Nazarene. Scholars have correlated Jewish and Greco-Roman documents and astronomical calendars with the New Testament accounts to estimate dates for the major events in Jesus's life.

Medieval Russian icon depicting the Life of Christ

Two main approaches have been used to determine the year of the birth of Jesus: one based on the accounts in the Gospels of his birth with reference to King Herod's reign, and the other by subtracting his stated age of "about 30 years" when he began preaching. Almost all scholars have acknowledged that Herod I died in 4 BC but a few scholars state Herod may have been alive during the early years of his son's regency, placing Herod's death as late as AD 1.[1]

Most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 and 4 BC.[2][3][4][5][6][7]

According to author Michael Molnar's The Star of Bethlehem - The Legacy of the Magi[8] Jesus was born on Saturday/Sabbath April 17, 6 BC / 17.4.748 AUC / 29 Nisan 3755 HC. He was an Aries the Ram/Lamb.

Three details have been used to estimate the year when Jesus began preaching: a mention of his age of "about 30 years" during "the fifteenth year" of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, another relating to the date of the building of the Temple in Jerusalem, and yet another concerning the death of John the Baptist.[9][10][11][12][13][14] Hence, scholars estimate that Jesus began preaching and gathering followers around AD 25–29. According to the three synoptic gospels Jesus continued preaching for at least one year, and according to John the Evangelist for three years.[9][11][15][16][17]

Five methods have been used to estimate the date of the crucifixion of Jesus. One uses non-Christian sources such as Josephus and Tacitus.[18][19] Another works backwards from the historically well-established trial of the Apostle Paul by the Roman proconsul Gallio in Corinth in AD 51/52 to estimate the date of Paul's conversion. Both methods result in AD 36 as an upper bound to the crucifixion.[20][21][22] Thus, scholars generally agree that Jesus was crucified between AD 30 and AD 36.[11][20][23][24] Isaac Newton's astronomical method calculates those ancient Passovers (always defined by a full moon) which are preceded by a Friday, as specified by all four Gospels; this leaves two potential crucifixion dates, 7 April AD 30 and 3 April AD 33.[25] In the lunar eclipse method, the Apostle Peter's statement that the moon turned to blood at the crucifixion (Acts of the Apostles 2:14–21) is taken to refer to the lunar eclipse of 3 April AD 33; although astronomers are discussing whether the eclipse was visible as far west as Jerusalem. Recent astronomical research uses the contrast between the synoptic date of Jesus' last Passover on the one hand, with John's date of the subsequent "Jewish Passover" on the other hand, to propose Jesus' Last Supper to have been on Wednesday, 1 April AD 33 and the crucifixion on Friday 3 April AD 33 and the Resurrection on the third day. An earth quake study has given further weight to the traditional date of April 3, AD 33 for Jesus crucifixion and subsequent Resurrection.[26]

Context and overview

 
Antiquities of the Jews by Josephus, c. AD 93–94, a source for the chronology of Jesus.[27]

The Christian gospels do not claim to provide an exhaustive list of the events in the life of Jesus.[28][29][30] They were written as theological documents in the context of early Christianity rather than historical chronicles, and their authors showed little interest in an absolute chronology of Jesus or in synchronizing the episodes of his life with the secular history of the age.[31][32][33] One indication that the gospels are theological documents rather than historical chronicles is that they devote about one-third of their text to just seven days, namely the last week of the life of Jesus in Jerusalem, also known as the Passion of Christ.[34]

Nevertheless, the gospels provide some details regarding events which can be clearly dated, so one can establish date ranges regarding major events in Jesus' life by comparison with independent sources.[31][32][35] A number of historical non-Christian documents, such as Jewish and Greco-Roman sources, have been used in historical analyses of the chronology of Jesus.[36] Almost all modern historians agree that Jesus existed, and regard his baptism and his crucifixion as historical events, and assume that approximate ranges for these events can be estimated.[37][38][39]

Using these methods, most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 and 4 BC,[2] and that Jesus' preaching began around AD 27–29 and lasted one to three years.[9][11][15][16] They calculate the death of Jesus as having taken place between AD 30 and 36.[11][20][23][24]

Year of Jesus' birth

The date of birth of Jesus of Nazareth is not stated in the gospels or in any secular text, but most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 BC and 4 BC.[2] Two main methods have been used to estimate the year of the birth of Jesus: one based on the accounts of his birth in the gospels with reference to King Herod's reign, and another based on subtracting his stated age of "about 30 years" from the time when he began preaching (Luke 3:23) in "the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar" (Luke 3:1–2). The two methods indicate a date of birth before Herod's death in 4 BC, and a date of birth around 2 BC, respectively.[2][40][41][42][43][23][44][45][46]

Biblical references to King Herod's reign

The two nativity accounts of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew and Gospel of Luke differ substantially from each other, and are considered to have been written independently. However, some consistent elements are evidently derived from a common early tradition:[47]

Thus both Luke and Matthew independently associate Jesus' birth with the reign of Herod the Great.[41] Matthew furthermore implies that Jesus was up to two years old when Herod reportedly ordered the Massacre of the Innocents, that is, the murder of all boys in Bethlehem up to the age of two (Matthew 2:16).[48]

Most scholarship concerning the date of Herod's death follows Emil Schürer's calculations published in 1896, which revised a traditional death date of 1 BC to 4 BC.[49][50][51][52][53] Two of Herod's sons, Archelaus and Philip the Tetrarch, dated their rule from 4 BC,[54] though Archelaus apparently held royal authority during Herod's lifetime.[55] Philip's reign would last for 37 years, until his death in the traditionally accepted 20th year of Tiberius (AD 34), which implies his accession as 4 BC.[56]

In 1998, Beyer published that the oldest manuscripts of Josephus’s Antiquities have the death of Philip in the 22nd year not the 20th, of Tiberius. In the British Library, there is not a single manuscript prior to AD 1544 that has the traditionally accepted 20th year of Tiberius for the death of Philip. This evidence removes the main obstacle for a later date of 1 BC for the death of Herod. A list of the oldest manuscripts is found in p. 91 “Josephus Re-examined”, D. Beyer.[57] Some other scholars also support the traditional date of 1 BC for Herod's death.[58][59][60][61] Filmer and Steinmann, for example, propose that Herod died in 1 BC, and that his heirs backdated their reigns to 4 or 3 BC to assert an overlapping with Herod's rule and bolster their own legitimacy.[51][62][50]

In Josephus' account, Herod's death was preceded by a lunar eclipse and followed by Passover.[63] An eclipse[64] took place in 4 BC on 13 March, about 29 days before Passover, and this eclipse has been suggested as the one referred to by Josephus.[53] There were, however, other eclipses during this period, and there are proponents of 5 BC[52][65] and the two eclipses of 1 BC occurring 10 January and 29 December.[62][66][50] Nevertheless, most scholars favour a birth year for Jesus between 6 and 4 BC.[3][4][67][68][40][41]

Subtracting Jesus' age of "about 30 years" when preaching

Another approach to estimating Jesus' year of birth is based on the statement in Luke 3:23 that he was "about 30 years of age" when starting his ministry.[23] Jesus began to preach after being baptised by John the Baptist, and based on Luke’s gospel John only began baptising people in "the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar" (Luke 3:1–2), which scholars estimate to have been in AD 28–29.[23][69][10][70][44] Subtracting 30 years, it appears that Jesus was born in 1–2 BC. However, if the phrase "about 30" is interpreted to mean 32 years old, this could fit a date of birth just within the reign of Herod, who died in 4 BC.[11][23][70]

The benchmark date of AD 28–29 is independently confirmed by John's statement (John 2:20) that the Temple reportedly was in its 46th year of construction during Passover when Jesus began his ministry, which likewise corresponds to 28–29 AD according to scholarly estimates.[45]

Other approaches

The Gospel of John 8:57 mentions in passing an upper limit of 50 for Jesus' age when preaching: "The Jews therefore said unto him, Thou art not yet fifty years old, and hast thou seen Abraham?" Fifty years is a round number which emphasises the discrepancy to Jesus's claim he had existed before Abraham, that is, for more than a thousand years.[71]

Some commentators have attempted to establish the date of birth by identifying the Star of Bethlehem with some known astronomical or astrological phenomenon. For example, astronomer Michael Molnar proposed 17 April 6 BC as the likely date of the Nativity, since that date corresponded to the heliacal rising and lunar occultation of Jupiter, while it was momentarily stationary in the constellation of Aries. According to Molnar, to knowledgeable astrologers of this time, this highly unusual combination of events would have indicated that a regal personage would be (or had been) born in Judea.[72] Other research points to a 1991 report from the Royal Astronomical Society, which mentions that Chinese astronomers noted a "comet" that lasted 70 days in the Capricorn region of the sky, in March of 5 BC. Authors Dugard and O'Reilly consider this event as the likely Star of Bethlehem.[73] However, there are many possible phenomena and none seems to match the Gospel account exactly.[74]

Ancient historians, on the other hands, all seem to agree that Jesus was born in 2 BC. This date is supported by the calculations of Tertullian, Irenaeus, Origen, Clement, Julius Africanus, Hippolytus, Eusebius, Epiphanius, Apollinaris and Orosius.[57]

Years of preaching

Reign of Tiberius and the Gospel of Luke

 
Part of the Madaba Map showing Bethabara (Βέθαβαρά), calling it the place where John baptised

One method for the estimation of the date of the beginning of the ministry of Jesus is based on the Gospel of Luke's specific statement in Luke 3:1–2 about the ministry of John the Baptist which preceded that of Jesus:[9][10]

Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar, Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea, and Herod being tetrarch of Galilee, and his brother Philip tetrarch of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis, and Lysanias tetrarch of Abilene, in the highpriesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God came unto John the son of Zacharias in the wilderness.

The reign of Tiberius began on the death of his predecessor Augustus in September AD 14, implying that the ministry of John the Baptist began in late AD 28 or early AD 29.[75][76] Riesner's alternative suggestion is that John the Baptist began his ministry in AD 26 or 27, because Tiberius ruled together with Augustus for two years before becoming the sole ruler. If so, the fifteenth year of Tiberius' reign would be counted from AD 12.[22] Riesner's suggestion is however considered less likely, as all the major Roman historians who calculate the years of Tiberius' rule – namely Tacitus, Suetonius and Cassius Dio – count from AD 14 – the year of Augustus' death. In addition, coin evidence shows that Tiberius started to reign in AD 14.[77]

The New Testament presents John the Baptist as the precursor to Jesus and the Baptism of Jesus as marking the beginning of Jesus' ministry.[78][79][80] In his sermon in Acts 10:37–38, delivered in the house of Cornelius the centurion, Apostle Peter refers to what had happened "throughout all Judaea, beginning from Galilee, after the baptism which John preached" and that Jesus had then gone about "doing good".[81] Jesus' baptism account is followed directly by his 40 day fast and ordeal.

The Temple in Jerusalem and the Gospel of John

 
Herod's Temple, referred to in John 2:13, as imagined in the Holyland Model of Jerusalem. It is currently situated adjacent to the Shrine of the Book exhibit at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem.

Another method for estimating the start of the ministry of Jesus without reliance on the Synoptic gospels is to relate the account in the Gospel of John about the visit of Jesus to Herod's Temple in Jerusalem with historical data about the construction of the Temple.[9][11][16]

John 2:13 says that Jesus went to the Temple in Jerusalem around the start of his ministry and in John 2:20 Jesus is told: "This temple has been under construction for forty-six years, and will you raise it up in three days?".[9][11]

Herod's Temple in Jerusalem was an extensive and long term construction on the Temple Mount, which was never fully completed even by the time it was destroyed by the Romans in AD 70.[82][83][84] Having built entire cities such as Caesarea Maritima, Herod saw the construction of the Temple as a key, colossal monument.[83] The dedication of the initial temple (sometimes called the inner Temple) followed a 17 or 18 month construction period, just after the visit of Augustus to Syria.[78][82]

Josephus (Ant 15.11.1) states that the temple's reconstruction was started by Herod in the 18th year of his reign.[9][23][85] But there is some uncertainty about how Josephus referred to and computed dates, which event marked the start of Herod's reign, and whether the initial date should refer to the inner Temple, or the subsequent construction.[11][16][78] Hence various scholars arrive at slightly different dates for the exact date of the start of the Temple construction, varying by a few years in their final estimation of the date of the Temple visit.[16][78] Given that it took 46 years of construction, the best scholarly estimate for when Jesus preached is around the year AD 26–27.[9][11][15][16][17][86][87]

Josephus' reference to John the Baptist

Both the gospels and first-century historian Flavius Josephus, in his work Antiquities of the Jews,[88] refer to Herod Antipas killing John the Baptist, and to the marriage of Herod and Herodias, establishing two key connections between Josephus and the biblical episodes.[12] Josephus refers to the imprisonment and execution of John the Baptist by Herod Antipas and that Herodias left her husband to marry Herod Antipas, in defiance of Jewish law.[12][13][14][89]

Josephus and the gospels differ, however, on the details and motives, e.g. whether the execution was a consequence of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias (as indicated in Matthew 14:4, Mark 6:18), or a pre-emptive measure by Herod which possibly took place before the marriage to quell a possible uprising based on the remarks of John, as Josephus suggests in Ant 18.5.2.[27][90][91][92]

 
The Baptist scolds Herod. Fresco by Masolino, 1435

The exact year of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias is subject to debate among scholars.[13] While some scholars place the year of the marriage in the range AD 27–31, others have approximated a date as late as AD 35, although such a late date has much less support.[13] In his analysis of Herod's life, Harold Hoehner estimates that John the Baptist's imprisonment probably occurred around AD 30–31.[93] The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia estimates the death of the Baptist to have occurred about AD 31–32.[14]

Josephus stated (Ant 18.5.2) that the AD 36 defeat of Herod Antipas in the conflicts with Aretas IV of Nabatea was widely considered by the Jews of the time as misfortune brought about by Herod's unjust execution of John the Baptist.[92][94][95] Given that John the Baptist was executed before the defeat of Herod by Aretas, and based on the scholarly estimates for the approximate date of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias, the last part of the ministry of John the Baptist and hence parts of the ministry of Jesus fall within the historical time span of AD 28–35, with the later year 35 having the least support among scholars.[13][95][96]

Date of crucifixion

Prefecture of Pontius Pilate

 
 
Roman senator and historian Tacitus wrote of the crucifixion of Christ (Jesus) in the Annals, a history of the Roman Empire during the first century.

All four canonical gospels state that Jesus was crucified during the prefecture of Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Roman Judaea.[97][98]

In the Antiquities of the Jews (written about AD 93), Josephus states (Ant 18.3) that Jesus was crucified on the orders of Pilate.[99] Most scholars agree that while this reference includes some later Christian interpolations, it originally included a reference to the execution of Jesus under Pilate.[100][101][102][103][104]

In the second century the Roman historian Tacitus[105][106] in The Annals (c. AD 116), described the persecution of Christians by Nero and stated (Annals 15.44) that Jesus had been executed on the orders of Pilate[99][107] during the reign of Tiberius (Emperor from 18 September AD 14–16 March AD 37).

According to Flavius Josephus,[108] Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea from AD 26 until he was replaced by Marcellus, either in AD 36 or AD 37, establishing the date of the death of Jesus between AD 26 and AD 37.[109][110][111]

Reign of Herod Antipas

In the Gospel of Luke, while Jesus is in Pilate's court, Pilate realizes that Jesus is a Galilean and thus is under the jurisdiction of Herod Antipas.[112][113] Given that Herod was in Jerusalem at that time, Pilate decided to send Jesus to Herod to be tried.[112][113]

This episode is described only in the Gospel of Luke (23:7–15).[114][115][116][117] While some scholars have questioned the authenticity of this episode, given that it is unique to the Gospel of Luke, the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia states that it fits well with the theme of the gospel.[14]

Herod Antipas, a son of Herod the Great, was born before 20 BC and was exiled to Gaul in the summer of AD 39 following a lengthy intrigue involving Caligula and Agrippa I, the grandson of his father.[118][119] This episode indicates that Jesus' death took place before AD 39.[120][121]

Conversion of Paul

 
The Temple of Apollo in Delphi, Greece, where the Delphi Inscription was discovered early in the 20th century.[122][123]

Another approach to estimating an upper bound for the year of death of Jesus is the estimation of the date of conversion of Paul the Apostle which the New Testament accounts place some time after the death of Jesus.[20][21][22] Paul's conversion is discussed in both the Letters of Paul and in the Acts of the Apostles.[20][124]

In the First Epistle to the Corinthians (15:3–8), Paul refers to his conversion. The Acts of the Apostles includes three separate references to his conversion experience, in Acts 9, Acts 22 and Acts 26.[125][126]

Estimating the year of Paul's conversion relies on working backwards from his trial before Junius Gallio in Achaea, Greece (Acts 18:12–17) around AD 51–52, a date derived from the discovery and publication, in 1905, of four stone fragments as part of the Delphi Inscriptions, at Delphi across the Gulf from Corinth.[123][127] The inscription[128] preserves a letter from Claudius concerning Gallio dated during the 26th acclamation of Claudius, sometime between January 51 and August 52.[129]

On this basis, most historians estimate that Gallio (brother of Seneca the Younger) became proconsul between the spring of AD 51 and the summer of AD 52, and that his position ended no later than AD 53.[122][123][127][130][131] The trial of Paul is generally assumed to be in the earlier part of Gallio's tenure, based on the reference (Acts 18:2) to his meeting in Corinth with Priscilla and Aquila, who had been recently expelled from Rome based on Emperor Claudius' expulsion of Jews from Rome, which is dated to AD 49–50.[127][132]

According to the New Testament, Paul spent eighteen months in Corinth, approximately seventeen years after his conversion.[123][133] Galatians 2:1–10 states that Paul went back to Jerusalem fourteen years after his conversion, and various missions (at times with Barnabas) such as those in Acts 11:25–26 and 2 Corinthians 11:23–33 appear in the Book of Acts.[20][21] The generally accepted scholarly estimate for the date of conversion of Paul is AD 33–36, placing the death of Jesus before this date range.[20][21][22]

Astronomical analysis

Newton's method

 
Isaac Newton deduced a methodology to date the crucifixion.

All four Gospels agree to within about a day that the crucifixion was at the time of Passover, and all four Gospels agree that Jesus died a few hours before the commencement of the Jewish Sabbath, i.e. he died before nightfall on a Friday (Matt 27:62; 28:1; Mark 15:42; Luke 23:54; John 19:31, 42). In the official festival calendar of Judaea, as used by the priests of the temple, Passover time was specified precisely. The slaughtering of the lambs for Passover occurred between 3pm and 5pm on the 14th day of the Jewish month Nisan (corresponding to March/April). The Passover meal commenced at moonrise (necessarily a full moon) that evening, i.e., at the start of 15 Nisan (the Jewish day running from evening to evening) (Leviticus 23:5; Numbers 28:16). There is an apparent discrepancy of one day in the Gospel accounts of the crucifixion which has been the subject of considerable debate. In John's Gospel, it is stated that the day of Jesus' trial and execution was the day before Passover (John 18:28 and 19:14), Hence John places the crucifixion on 14 Nisan. Likewise the Apostle Paul, in his First Epistle to the Corinthians, implies Jesus died on a 14 Nisan ("sacrificed as a Passover lamb", 1 Cor 5:7), and was resurrected on the Jewish festival of the first fruits, i.e. on a 16 Nisan (1 Cor 15:20).[134] The correct interpretation of the Synoptics is less clear. Thus some scholars believe that all 4 Gospels place the crucifixion on Friday, 14 Nisan, others believe that according to the Synoptics it occurred on Friday, 15 Nisan. The problem that then has to be solved is that of determining in which of the years of the reign of Pontius Pilate (AD 26–36) the 14th and 15th Nisan fell on a Friday.[25]

In a paper published posthumously in 1733, Isaac Newton considered only the range AD 31–36 and calculated that the Friday requirement is met only on Friday 3 April AD 33, and 23 April AD 34. The latter date can only have fallen on a Friday if an exceptional leap month had been introduced that year, but this was favoured by Newton.[135][136][137] In the twentieth century, the standard view became that of J. K. Fotheringham, who in 1910 suggested 3 April AD 33 on the basis of its coincidence with a lunar eclipse.[136][138] In 1933, António Cabreira, following a similar method, arrived at the same date,[139] as did, in the 1990s, Bradley E. Schaefer and J. P. Pratt.[135][140] Also according to Humphreys and Waddington, the lunar Hebrew calendar leaves only two plausible dates within the reign of Pontius Pilate for Jesus' death, and both of these would have been a 14 Nisan as specified in the Gospel of John: Friday 7 April AD 30, and Friday 3 April AD 33.

A more refined calculation takes into account that the Hebrew calendar was based not on astronomical calculation but on observation of the lunar phases, following criticism that it is possible to establish the phase of the moon on a particular day two thousand years ago but not whether it was obscured by clouds or haze.[141][142] Including the possibility of a cloudy sky obscuring the moon, and assuming that the Jewish authorities would be aware that lunar months can only be either 29 or 30 days long (the time from one new moon to the next is 29.53 days), then the refined calculation states that the Friday requirement might also have been met, during Pontius Pilate's term of office, on 11 April AD 27. Another potential date arises if the Jewish authorities happened to add an irregular lunar leap month to compensate for a meteorologically delayed harvest season: this would yield one additional possibility during Pilate's time, which is Newton's favoured date of 23 April AD 34.[143] Colin Humphreys calculates but rejects these AD 27 and AD 34 dates on the basis that the former is much too early to be compatible with Luke 3:1–2, and spring AD 34 is probably too late to be compatible with Paul's timeline, confirming Friday 7 April AD 30, and Friday 3 April AD 33 as the two feasible crucifixion dates.[144]

Eclipse method

 
Lunar eclipse, 15 May 2022. Red hue caused by diffraction of sunlight through Earth's atmosphere.

A lunar eclipse is potentially alluded to in Acts of the Apostles 2:14–21 ("The sun shall be turned into darkness, And the moon into blood, Before the day of the Lord come"), as pointed out by physicist Colin Humphreys and astronomer Graeme Waddington. There was in fact a lunar eclipse on 3 April AD 33,[138][11] a date which coincides with one of Newton's astronomically possible crucifixion dates (see above). Humphreys and Waddington have calculated that in ancient Jerusalem this eclipse would have been visible at moonrise at 6.20 pm as a 20% partial eclipse (a full moon with a potentially red "bite" missing at the top left of the moon's disc). They propose that a large proportion of the Jewish population would have witnessed this eclipse as they would have been waiting for sunset in the west and immediately afterwards the rise of the anticipated full moon in the east as the prescribed signal to start their household Passover meals.[25] Humphreys and Waddington therefore suggest a scenario where Jesus was crucified and died at 3pm on 3 April AD 33, followed by a red partial lunar eclipse at moonrise at 6.20pm observed by the Jewish population, and that Peter recalls this event when preaching the resurrection to the Jews (Acts of the Apostles 2:14–21).[25] Astronomer Bradley Schaefer agrees with the eclipse date but disputes that the eclipsed moon would have been visible by the time the moon had risen in Jerusalem.[140][145][146]

A potentially related issue involves the reference in the Synoptic Gospels to a three-hour period of darkness over the whole land on the day of the crucifixion (according to Luke 23:45 τοῦ ἡλίου ἐκλιπόντος – the sun was darkened). Although some scholars view this as a literary device common among ancient writers rather than a description of an actual event,[147][148] other writers have attempted to identify a meteorological event or a datable astronomical phenomenon which this could have referred to. It could not have been a solar eclipse, since this could not take place during the full moon at Passover,[149][150] and in any case solar eclipses take minutes, not hours.[151] In 1983, astronomers Humphreys and Waddington noted that the reference to a solar eclipse is missing in some versions of Luke and argued that the solar eclipse was a later faulty scribal amendment of what was actually the lunar eclipse of AD 33.[25] This is a claim which historian David Henige describes as "undefended" and "indefensible".[152] Humphreys and a number of scholars have alternatively argued for the sun's darkening to have been caused by a khamsin, i.e. a sand storm, which can occur between mid-March and May in the Middle East and which does typically last for several hours.[153]

In a review[154] of Humphreys' book, theologian William R Telford points out that the non-astronomical parts of his lunar eclipse argument are based on the assumption that the chronologies described in the New Testament are historical and based on eyewitness testimony, accepting uncritically statements such as the "three different Passovers in John" and Matthew's statement that Jesus died at the ninth hour. He also alleges that Humphreys uses two very dubious sources, namely Pilate's alleged letter to Tiberius and the writings of the fifth-century Bishop Cyril of Alexandria, which Humphreys however classifies as forgery or contemporary interpretation indicative of a tradition at the time.[155]

Double Passover method

 
The rising full moon at sunset signals the start of the Passover meal. This is two weeks after the new moon has heralded the start of the month of Nisan (March/April).

In the crucifixion narrative, the synoptic gospels stress that Jesus celebrated a Passover meal (Mark 14:12ff; Luke 22:15) before his crucifixion, which contrasts sharply with the independent gospel of John who is explicit that the official "Jewish" Passover (John 11:55) started at nightfall after Jesus' death. In his 2011 book, Colin Humphreys proposes a resolution to this apparent discrepancy by positing that Jesus' "synoptic" Passover meal in fact took place two days before John's "Jewish" Passover because the former is calculated by the putative original Jewish lunar calendar (itself based on the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar putatively introduced to the Israelites by Moses in the 13th century BC, and still used today by the Samaritans). The official "Jewish" Passover in contrast was determined by a Hebrew calendar reckoning which had been modified during the Babylonian exile in the 6th century BC. This modified Hebrew calendar is in use among most Jews today. One basic difference lies in the determination of the first day of the new month: while the Samaritans use the calculated (because by definition invisible) new moon, mainstream Jews use the first observation of the thin crescent of the waxing moon which is on average 30 hours later. The other basic difference lies in the fact that the Samaritan calendar uses a sunrise-to-sunrise day, while the official Hebrew calendar uses a sunset-to-sunset day. Due to these differences, the Samaritan Passover is normally one day earlier than the Jewish Passover (and in some years two or more days earlier). The crucifixion year of Jesus can then be calculated by asking the question in which of the two astronomically possible years of AD 30 and AD 33 is there a time gap between the last supper and the crucifixion which is compatible with the gospel timeline of Jesus' last 6 days. The astronomical calculations show that a hypothetical AD 30 date would require an incompatible Monday Last Supper, while AD 33 offers a compatible Last Supper on Wednesday, 1 April AD 33, followed by a compatible crucifixion on Friday, 3 April AD 33.[156]

Given these assumptions he argues that the calculated date of Wednesday 1 April AD 33 for the Last Supper allows all four gospel accounts to be astronomically correct, with Jesus celebrating Passover two days before his death according to the original Mosaic calendar, and the Jewish authorities celebrating Passover just after the crucifixion, using the modified Babylonian calendar. In contrast, the Christian church tradition of celebrating the Last Supper on Maundy Thursday would be an anachronism.[157][158] The calculated chronology incidentally supports John's and Paul's narratives that Jesus died at the same hour (Friday 3pm) on 3 April AD 33 that the Passover lambs were slaughtered.[159]

Scholarly debate on the hour, day, and year of death

 
A Papyrus 90 fragment of John 19

The estimation of the time of the death of Jesus based on the New Testament accounts has been the subject of debate among scholars for centuries.[160] The debate can be summarised as follows. In the Synoptic account, the Last Supper takes place on the first night of Passover, defined in the Torah as occurring at twilight on 14 of Nisan, and the crucifixion is the following day on 15 Nisan.[161] However, in the Gospel of John the trial of Jesus takes place before the Passover meal[162] and the sentencing takes place on the day of Preparation, before Passover. Some scholars have presented arguments to reconcile the accounts,[163] although Raymond E. Brown, reviewing these, concluded that they can not be easily reconciled.[160] One involves the suggestion that[164] for Jesus and his disciples, the Passover could have begun at dawn Thursday, while for traditional Jews it would not have begun until dusk that same day.[165][166] Another is that John followed the Roman practice of calculating the new day beginning at midnight, rather than the Jewish reckoning.[167] However, this Roman practice was used only for dating contracts and leases.[168][169] D. A. Carson argues that 'preparation of the Passover' could mean any day of the Passover week.[170] Some have argued that the modern precision of marking the time of day should not be read back into the gospel accounts, written at a time when no standardization of timepieces, or exact recording of hours and minutes was available.[163][171] Andreas Köstenberger argues that in the first century time was often estimated to the closest three-hour mark, and that the intention of the author of the Mark Gospel was to provide the setting for the three hours of darkness while the Gospel of John seeks to stress the length of the proceedings, starting in the 'early morning'"[172] Some scholars have argued that it is unlikely that the many events of the Passion could have taken place in the span from midnight to about 9 o'clock in the morning.[173] William Barclay has argued that the portrayal of the death of Jesus in the John Gospel is a literary construct, presenting the crucifixion as taking place at the time on the day of Passover when the sacrificial lamb would be killed, and thus portraying Jesus as the Lamb of God.[174] This understanding fits with Old Testament typology, in which Jesus entered Jerusalem to identify himself as the Paschal lamb on Nisan 10 was crucified and died at 3:00 in the afternoon of Nisan 14, at the same time the High Priest would have sacrificed the Paschal lamb, and rose before dawn the morning of Nisan 16, as a type of offering of the First Fruits.

Colin Humphreys' widely publicised "double passover" astronomical analysis, published in 2011 and outlined above, places the time of death of Jesus at 3pm on 3 April AD 33 and claims to reconcile the Gospel accounts for the "six days" leading up to the crucifixion. His solution is that the synoptic gospels and John's gospel use two distinct calendars (the official Jewish lunar calendar, and what is today the Samaritan lunar calendar, the latter used in Jesus' day also by the Essenes of Qumran and the Zealots). Humphrey's proposal was preceded in 1957 by the work of Annie Jaubert[175] who suggested that Jesus held his Last Supper at Passover time according to the Qumran solar calendar. Humphreys rejects Jaubert's conclusion by demonstrating that the Qumran solar reckoning would always place Jesus' Last Supper after the Jewish Passover, in contradiction to all four gospels. Instead, Humphreys points out that the Essene community at Qumran additionally used a lunar calendar, itself evidently based on the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar. Humphreys suggests that the reason why his two-calendar solution had not been discovered earlier is (a) widespread scholarly ignorance of the existence of the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar (used alongside the well-known Egyptian administrative solar calendar, and presumably the basis for the 13th-century BC Jewish lunar calendar), and (b) the fact that the modern surviving small community of Samaritans did not reveal the calculations underlying their lunar calendar (preserving the Egyptian reckoning) to outsiders until the 1960s.

In a review of Humphreys' book, theologian William R Telford points out that the non-astronomical parts of his argument are based on the assumption that the chronologies described in the New Testament are historical and based on eyewitness testimony. In doing so, Telford says, Humphreys has built an argument upon unsound premises which "does violence to the nature of the biblical texts, whose mixture of fact and fiction, tradition and redaction, history and myth all make the rigid application of the scientific tool of astronomy to their putative data a misconstrued enterprise."[154] As Telford had pointed out in his own book in 1980,[176] "the initial three-day structure found in [Mark 11] is occasioned by the purely redactional linkage of the extraneous fig-tree story with the triumphal entry and cleansing of the temple traditions, and is not a chronology upon which one can base any historical reconstructions."

Chronological comparison between the Jesus Passion narratives according to the Gospels of Mark and John

Empty tombBurial of JesusQuod scripsi, scripsiCrucifixion of JesusPilate's courtDenial of PeterSanhedrin trial of JesusArrest of Jesus

Last SupperEmpty tombBurial of JesusCrucifixion darknessMocking of JesusCrucifixion of JesusPilate's courtDenial of PeterSanhedrin trial of JesusArrest of JesusGethsemanePassover SederLast Supper


Resurrection "on the third day"

The Gospels do not describe the resurrection, but report the discovery of Jesus' empty tomb "very early on the first day of the week" (Mark 16:2), and subsequent appearances of Jesus. A potential chronological contradiction arises in the fact that the resurrection is referred to as happening "on the third day" (e.g. Matt 16:21) whereas elsewhere Matthew (Matt 12:40) states that Jesus would be buried "three days and three nights".[177] The modern concept of zero as a number was introduced by Indian scholars only in the fifth century AD,[178] so that for example the currently used Gregorian calendar does not have a "year 0" and instead begins with the year AD 1 which is immediately preceded by 1 BC. Applied to the reckoning of days, in the absence of a day "zero", that is, using inclusive counting, many modern languages (e.g. Greek, Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Welsh) continue referring to two weeks as "fifteen days",[179] whereas in English, which does observe zero and thus uses exclusive counting, this space of time is referred to as a fortnight.[180] Following general practice at the time, the Gospels employ inclusive counting, highlighted in Mt 27.62–64:

the chief priests and the Pharisees went to Pilate. ‘Sir,’ they said, ‘we remember that while he was still alive that deceiver said, “After three days [Gr. meta treis hemeras] I will rise again.” So give the order for the tomb to be made secure until the third day [Gr. tes trites hemeras]’”

where Matthew uses "after three days" and "until the third day" interchangeably.[181]

Ancient estimates

Other estimates of the chronology of Jesus have been proposed over the centuries. Hippolytus, around AD 200, dates his birth as on Wednesday the eighth day to the Kalends of January (25 December) in the 42nd year of Caesar Augustus.[182] This may refer to 2, 3, or 4 BC. (It is not certain how much knowledge Hippolytus had of the calendar at that time, which was perturbed.[183]) There is some disagreement between manuscripts, but, in any case, he seems to have believed that the incarnation was on the 25th of March and the birth nine months later.[183] He dates the crucifixion to the 33rd year of the life of Christ, on Friday 25 March of the 18th year of Tiberius. The reign of Tiberius began in AD 14, but 25 March never fell on a Friday between AD 30 and AD 34 inclusively.

Eusebius, in his work Historia Ecclesiae first published in AD 313,[184] placed the birth of Jesus in the forty-second year of Augustus' reign, and the twenty-eighth after the subjugation of Egypt and the deaths of Antony & Cleopatra, i.e. in 3 BC.[185] The 3rd/4th century Roman historian Lactantius states that Jesus was crucified on 23 March AD 29.[186] Maximus the Confessor and Cassiodorus asserted that the death of Jesus occurred in AD 31.[citation needed]

In AD 525, Dionysius Exiguus devised an Easter table to calculate the dates of Easter at a time when Julian calendar years were still being identified by naming the consuls who held office that year – Dionysius himself stated that the "present year" was "the consulship of Probus Junior", which was 525 years "since the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ".[187] Thus Dionysius implied that Jesus' incarnation occurred 525 years earlier.[188]Bonnie J. Blackburn and Leofranc Holford-Strevens briefly present arguments for 2 BC, 1 BC, or AD 1 as the year Dionysius intended for the Nativity or incarnation. Among the sources of confusion are:[189]

  • In modern times, incarnation is synonymous with the conception, but some ancient writers, such as Bede, considered incarnation to be synonymous with the Nativity.
  • The civil or consular year began on 1 January but the Diocletian year began on 29 August (30 August in the year before a Julian leap year).
  • There were inaccuracies in the lists of consuls.
  • There were confused summations of emperors' regnal years.

It is not known how Dionysius established the year of Jesus's birth. Two major theories are that Dionysius based his calculation on the Gospel of Luke, which states that Jesus was "about thirty years old" shortly after "the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar", and hence subtracted thirty years from that date, or that Dionysius counted back 532 years from the first year of his new table.[190][191][192]

The Anglo-Saxon historian the Venerable Bede, who was familiar with the work of Dionysius, used Anno Domini dating in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People, completed in AD 731. Both Dionysius and Bede regarded Anno Domini as beginning at the incarnation of Jesus, but "the distinction between Incarnation and Nativity was not drawn until the late 9th century, when in some places the Incarnation was identified with Christ's conception, i.e., the Annunciation on March 25". On the continent of Europe, Anno Domini was introduced as the calendrical system of choice of the Carolingian Renaissance by the English cleric and scholar Alcuin in the late eighth century. Its endorsement by Emperor Charlemagne and his successors popularizing this calendar throughout the Carolingian Empire ultimately lies at the core of the calendar's global prevalence today.[193]

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b c d John P. Meier (1991). A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, v. 1; The Roots of the Problem and the Person, ch. 11, ... "A Chronology of Jesus Life," pp. 373–433. Anchor Bible Reference Library.
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  5. ^ Michael Grant. (1977). Jesus: An Historian's Review of the Gospels, p. 71. Scribner's.
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  7. ^ Taylor Marshall (2012). The Eternal City, pp. 49-50. Dallas, St. John Press.
  8. ^ Molnar, Michael, The Star of Bethlehem - The Legacy of the Magi, 2013,
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  33. ^ Paula Fredriksen. (1999). Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews, pp. 6–7, 105–10, 232–34, 266. Alfred A. Knopf Publishers.
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  37. ^ In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship, Bart Ehrman wrote: "He certainly existed, as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity, Christian or non-Christian, agrees" B. Ehrman, 2011 Forged : writing in the name of God ISBN 978-0-06-207863-6. p. 285
  38. ^ Ramm, Bernard L (1993). "An Evangelical Christology: Ecumenic and Historic". Regent College Publishing: 19. There is almost universal agreement that Jesus lived {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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  43. ^ Murray, Alexander, "Medieval Christmas", History Today, December 1986, 36 (12), pp. 31–39.
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  71. ^ Colin Humphreys, The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978-0-521-73200-0, p. 72
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  73. ^ O'Reilly, Bill, and Dugard, Martin, Killing Jesus: A History, Henry Holt and Company, 2013, ISBN 0805098542, p. 15.
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Sources

External links

  • Catholic Encyclopedia (1910): Chronology of the Life of Jesus Christ

chronology, jesus, chronology, jesus, aims, establish, timeline, events, life, jesus, nazarene, scholars, have, correlated, jewish, greco, roman, documents, astronomical, calendars, with, testament, accounts, estimate, dates, major, events, jesus, life, mediev. A chronology of Jesus aims to establish a timeline for the events of the life of Jesus the Nazarene Scholars have correlated Jewish and Greco Roman documents and astronomical calendars with the New Testament accounts to estimate dates for the major events in Jesus s life Medieval Russian icon depicting the Life of Christ Two main approaches have been used to determine the year of the birth of Jesus one based on the accounts in the Gospels of his birth with reference to King Herod s reign and the other by subtracting his stated age of about 30 years when he began preaching Almost all scholars have acknowledged that Herod I died in 4 BC but a few scholars state Herod may have been alive during the early years of his son s regency placing Herod s death as late as AD 1 1 Most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 and 4 BC 2 3 4 5 6 7 According to author Michael Molnar s The Star of Bethlehem The Legacy of the Magi 8 Jesus was born on Saturday Sabbath April 17 6 BC 17 4 748 AUC 29 Nisan 3755 HC He was an Aries the Ram Lamb Three details have been used to estimate the year when Jesus began preaching a mention of his age of about 30 years during the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar another relating to the date of the building of the Temple in Jerusalem and yet another concerning the death of John the Baptist 9 10 11 12 13 14 Hence scholars estimate that Jesus began preaching and gathering followers around AD 25 29 According to the three synoptic gospels Jesus continued preaching for at least one year and according to John the Evangelist for three years 9 11 15 16 17 Five methods have been used to estimate the date of the crucifixion of Jesus One uses non Christian sources such as Josephus and Tacitus 18 19 Another works backwards from the historically well established trial of the Apostle Paul by the Roman proconsul Gallio in Corinth in AD 51 52 to estimate the date of Paul s conversion Both methods result in AD 36 as an upper bound to the crucifixion 20 21 22 Thus scholars generally agree that Jesus was crucified between AD 30 and AD 36 11 20 23 24 Isaac Newton s astronomical method calculates those ancient Passovers always defined by a full moon which are preceded by a Friday as specified by all four Gospels this leaves two potential crucifixion dates 7 April AD 30 and 3 April AD 33 25 In the lunar eclipse method the Apostle Peter s statement that the moon turned to blood at the crucifixion Acts of the Apostles 2 14 21 is taken to refer to the lunar eclipse of 3 April AD 33 although astronomers are discussing whether the eclipse was visible as far west as Jerusalem Recent astronomical research uses the contrast between the synoptic date of Jesus last Passover on the one hand with John s date of the subsequent Jewish Passover on the other hand to propose Jesus Last Supper to have been on Wednesday 1 April AD 33 and the crucifixion on Friday 3 April AD 33 and the Resurrection on the third day An earth quake study has given further weight to the traditional date of April 3 AD 33 for Jesus crucifixion and subsequent Resurrection 26 Contents 1 Context and overview 2 Year of Jesus birth 2 1 Biblical references to King Herod s reign 2 2 Subtracting Jesus age of about 30 years when preaching 2 3 Other approaches 3 Years of preaching 3 1 Reign of Tiberius and the Gospel of Luke 3 2 The Temple in Jerusalem and the Gospel of John 3 3 Josephus reference to John the Baptist 4 Date of crucifixion 4 1 Prefecture of Pontius Pilate 4 2 Reign of Herod Antipas 4 3 Conversion of Paul 4 4 Astronomical analysis 4 4 1 Newton s method 4 4 2 Eclipse method 4 4 3 Double Passover method 4 5 Scholarly debate on the hour day and year of death 5 Resurrection on the third day 6 Ancient estimates 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksContext and overview Edit Antiquities of the Jews by Josephus c AD 93 94 a source for the chronology of Jesus 27 The Christian gospels do not claim to provide an exhaustive list of the events in the life of Jesus 28 29 30 They were written as theological documents in the context of early Christianity rather than historical chronicles and their authors showed little interest in an absolute chronology of Jesus or in synchronizing the episodes of his life with the secular history of the age 31 32 33 One indication that the gospels are theological documents rather than historical chronicles is that they devote about one third of their text to just seven days namely the last week of the life of Jesus in Jerusalem also known as the Passion of Christ 34 Nevertheless the gospels provide some details regarding events which can be clearly dated so one can establish date ranges regarding major events in Jesus life by comparison with independent sources 31 32 35 A number of historical non Christian documents such as Jewish and Greco Roman sources have been used in historical analyses of the chronology of Jesus 36 Almost all modern historians agree that Jesus existed and regard his baptism and his crucifixion as historical events and assume that approximate ranges for these events can be estimated 37 38 39 Using these methods most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 and 4 BC 2 and that Jesus preaching began around AD 27 29 and lasted one to three years 9 11 15 16 They calculate the death of Jesus as having taken place between AD 30 and 36 11 20 23 24 Year of Jesus birth EditMain article Date of birth of Jesus Further information Nativity of Jesus The date of birth of Jesus of Nazareth is not stated in the gospels or in any secular text but most scholars assume a date of birth between 6 BC and 4 BC 2 Two main methods have been used to estimate the year of the birth of Jesus one based on the accounts of his birth in the gospels with reference to King Herod s reign and another based on subtracting his stated age of about 30 years from the time when he began preaching Luke 3 23 in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar Luke 3 1 2 The two methods indicate a date of birth before Herod s death in 4 BC and a date of birth around 2 BC respectively 2 40 41 42 43 23 44 45 46 Biblical references to King Herod s reign Edit The two nativity accounts of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew and Gospel of Luke differ substantially from each other and are considered to have been written independently However some consistent elements are evidently derived from a common early tradition 47 Jesus was born under the Judean king Herod the Great Matthew 2 1f Luke 1 5 vs Luke 2 1f in Bethlehem Matthew 2 5f Luke 2 4 15 prior to his parents moving to Nazareth Matthew 2 22f or before their return to Nazareth Luke 2 39 Jesus parents Mary and Joseph were betrothed Matthew 1 18 20 Luke 1 27 2 5 His birth was a virgin birth conceived by the Holy Spirit Angels announced Jesus birth his name his role as the Messiah being a descendant of King David and the son of God and his mission to save his people from sin Matthew 1 21 Luke 1 77 2 11 30 Thus both Luke and Matthew independently associate Jesus birth with the reign of Herod the Great 41 Matthew furthermore implies that Jesus was up to two years old when Herod reportedly ordered the Massacre of the Innocents that is the murder of all boys in Bethlehem up to the age of two Matthew 2 16 48 Most scholarship concerning the date of Herod s death follows Emil Schurer s calculations published in 1896 which revised a traditional death date of 1 BC to 4 BC 49 50 51 52 53 Two of Herod s sons Archelaus and Philip the Tetrarch dated their rule from 4 BC 54 though Archelaus apparently held royal authority during Herod s lifetime 55 Philip s reign would last for 37 years until his death in the traditionally accepted 20th year of Tiberius AD 34 which implies his accession as 4 BC 56 In 1998 Beyer published that the oldest manuscripts of Josephus s Antiquities have the death of Philip in the 22nd year not the 20th of Tiberius In the British Library there is not a single manuscript prior to AD 1544 that has the traditionally accepted 20th year of Tiberius for the death of Philip This evidence removes the main obstacle for a later date of 1 BC for the death of Herod A list of the oldest manuscripts is found in p 91 Josephus Re examined D Beyer 57 Some other scholars also support the traditional date of 1 BC for Herod s death 58 59 60 61 Filmer and Steinmann for example propose that Herod died in 1 BC and that his heirs backdated their reigns to 4 or 3 BC to assert an overlapping with Herod s rule and bolster their own legitimacy 51 62 50 In Josephus account Herod s death was preceded by a lunar eclipse and followed by Passover 63 An eclipse 64 took place in 4 BC on 13 March about 29 days before Passover and this eclipse has been suggested as the one referred to by Josephus 53 There were however other eclipses during this period and there are proponents of 5 BC 52 65 and the two eclipses of 1 BC occurring 10 January and 29 December 62 66 50 Nevertheless most scholars favour a birth year for Jesus between 6 and 4 BC 3 4 67 68 40 41 Subtracting Jesus age of about 30 years when preaching Edit Another approach to estimating Jesus year of birth is based on the statement in Luke 3 23 that he was about 30 years of age when starting his ministry 23 Jesus began to preach after being baptised by John the Baptist and based on Luke s gospel John only began baptising people in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar Luke 3 1 2 which scholars estimate to have been in AD 28 29 23 69 10 70 44 Subtracting 30 years it appears that Jesus was born in 1 2 BC However if the phrase about 30 is interpreted to mean 32 years old this could fit a date of birth just within the reign of Herod who died in 4 BC 11 23 70 The benchmark date of AD 28 29 is independently confirmed by John s statement John 2 20 that the Temple reportedly was in its 46th year of construction during Passover when Jesus began his ministry which likewise corresponds to 28 29 AD according to scholarly estimates 45 Other approaches Edit The Gospel of John 8 57 mentions in passing an upper limit of 50 for Jesus age when preaching The Jews therefore said unto him Thou art not yet fifty years old and hast thou seen Abraham Fifty years is a round number which emphasises the discrepancy to Jesus s claim he had existed before Abraham that is for more than a thousand years 71 Some commentators have attempted to establish the date of birth by identifying the Star of Bethlehem with some known astronomical or astrological phenomenon For example astronomer Michael Molnar proposed 17 April 6 BC as the likely date of the Nativity since that date corresponded to the heliacal rising and lunar occultation of Jupiter while it was momentarily stationary in the constellation of Aries According to Molnar to knowledgeable astrologers of this time this highly unusual combination of events would have indicated that a regal personage would be or had been born in Judea 72 Other research points to a 1991 report from the Royal Astronomical Society which mentions that Chinese astronomers noted a comet that lasted 70 days in the Capricorn region of the sky in March of 5 BC Authors Dugard and O Reilly consider this event as the likely Star of Bethlehem 73 However there are many possible phenomena and none seems to match the Gospel account exactly 74 Ancient historians on the other hands all seem to agree that Jesus was born in 2 BC This date is supported by the calculations of Tertullian Irenaeus Origen Clement Julius Africanus Hippolytus Eusebius Epiphanius Apollinaris and Orosius 57 Years of preaching EditReign of Tiberius and the Gospel of Luke Edit Part of the Madaba Map showing Bethabara Be8abara calling it the place where John baptised One method for the estimation of the date of the beginning of the ministry of Jesus is based on the Gospel of Luke s specific statement in Luke 3 1 2 about the ministry of John the Baptist which preceded that of Jesus 9 10 Now in the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar Pontius Pilate being governor of Judaea and Herod being tetrarch of Galilee and his brother Philip tetrarch of the region of Ituraea and Trachonitis and Lysanias tetrarch of Abilene in the highpriesthood of Annas and Caiaphas the word of God came unto John the son of Zacharias in the wilderness The reign of Tiberius began on the death of his predecessor Augustus in September AD 14 implying that the ministry of John the Baptist began in late AD 28 or early AD 29 75 76 Riesner s alternative suggestion is that John the Baptist began his ministry in AD 26 or 27 because Tiberius ruled together with Augustus for two years before becoming the sole ruler If so the fifteenth year of Tiberius reign would be counted from AD 12 22 Riesner s suggestion is however considered less likely as all the major Roman historians who calculate the years of Tiberius rule namely Tacitus Suetonius and Cassius Dio count from AD 14 the year of Augustus death In addition coin evidence shows that Tiberius started to reign in AD 14 77 The New Testament presents John the Baptist as the precursor to Jesus and the Baptism of Jesus as marking the beginning of Jesus ministry 78 79 80 In his sermon in Acts 10 37 38 delivered in the house of Cornelius the centurion Apostle Peter refers to what had happened throughout all Judaea beginning from Galilee after the baptism which John preached and that Jesus had then gone about doing good 81 Jesus baptism account is followed directly by his 40 day fast and ordeal The Temple in Jerusalem and the Gospel of John Edit Herod s Temple referred to in John 2 13 as imagined in the Holyland Model of Jerusalem It is currently situated adjacent to the Shrine of the Book exhibit at the Israel Museum Jerusalem Another method for estimating the start of the ministry of Jesus without reliance on the Synoptic gospels is to relate the account in the Gospel of John about the visit of Jesus to Herod s Temple in Jerusalem with historical data about the construction of the Temple 9 11 16 John 2 13 says that Jesus went to the Temple in Jerusalem around the start of his ministry and in John 2 20 Jesus is told This temple has been under construction for forty six years and will you raise it up in three days 9 11 Herod s Temple in Jerusalem was an extensive and long term construction on the Temple Mount which was never fully completed even by the time it was destroyed by the Romans in AD 70 82 83 84 Having built entire cities such as Caesarea Maritima Herod saw the construction of the Temple as a key colossal monument 83 The dedication of the initial temple sometimes called the inner Temple followed a 17 or 18 month construction period just after the visit of Augustus to Syria 78 82 Josephus Ant 15 11 1 states that the temple s reconstruction was started by Herod in the 18th year of his reign 9 23 85 But there is some uncertainty about how Josephus referred to and computed dates which event marked the start of Herod s reign and whether the initial date should refer to the inner Temple or the subsequent construction 11 16 78 Hence various scholars arrive at slightly different dates for the exact date of the start of the Temple construction varying by a few years in their final estimation of the date of the Temple visit 16 78 Given that it took 46 years of construction the best scholarly estimate for when Jesus preached is around the year AD 26 27 9 11 15 16 17 86 87 Josephus reference to John the Baptist Edit Both the gospels and first century historian Flavius Josephus in his work Antiquities of the Jews 88 refer to Herod Antipas killing John the Baptist and to the marriage of Herod and Herodias establishing two key connections between Josephus and the biblical episodes 12 Josephus refers to the imprisonment and execution of John the Baptist by Herod Antipas and that Herodias left her husband to marry Herod Antipas in defiance of Jewish law 12 13 14 89 Josephus and the gospels differ however on the details and motives e g whether the execution was a consequence of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias as indicated in Matthew 14 4 Mark 6 18 or a pre emptive measure by Herod which possibly took place before the marriage to quell a possible uprising based on the remarks of John as Josephus suggests in Ant 18 5 2 27 90 91 92 The Baptist scolds Herod Fresco by Masolino 1435 The exact year of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias is subject to debate among scholars 13 While some scholars place the year of the marriage in the range AD 27 31 others have approximated a date as late as AD 35 although such a late date has much less support 13 In his analysis of Herod s life Harold Hoehner estimates that John the Baptist s imprisonment probably occurred around AD 30 31 93 The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia estimates the death of the Baptist to have occurred about AD 31 32 14 Josephus stated Ant 18 5 2 that the AD 36 defeat of Herod Antipas in the conflicts with Aretas IV of Nabatea was widely considered by the Jews of the time as misfortune brought about by Herod s unjust execution of John the Baptist 92 94 95 Given that John the Baptist was executed before the defeat of Herod by Aretas and based on the scholarly estimates for the approximate date of the marriage of Herod Antipas and Herodias the last part of the ministry of John the Baptist and hence parts of the ministry of Jesus fall within the historical time span of AD 28 35 with the later year 35 having the least support among scholars 13 95 96 Date of crucifixion EditPrefecture of Pontius Pilate Edit See also Pilate s court Josephus on Jesus and Tacitus on Christ Roman senator and historian Tacitus wrote of the crucifixion of Christ Jesus in the Annals a history of the Roman Empire during the first century All four canonical gospels state that Jesus was crucified during the prefecture of Pontius Pilate the Roman governor of Roman Judaea 97 98 In the Antiquities of the Jews written about AD 93 Josephus states Ant 18 3 that Jesus was crucified on the orders of Pilate 99 Most scholars agree that while this reference includes some later Christian interpolations it originally included a reference to the execution of Jesus under Pilate 100 101 102 103 104 In the second century the Roman historian Tacitus 105 106 in The Annals c AD 116 described the persecution of Christians by Nero and stated Annals 15 44 that Jesus had been executed on the orders of Pilate 99 107 during the reign of Tiberius Emperor from 18 September AD 14 16 March AD 37 According to Flavius Josephus 108 Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea from AD 26 until he was replaced by Marcellus either in AD 36 or AD 37 establishing the date of the death of Jesus between AD 26 and AD 37 109 110 111 Reign of Herod Antipas Edit See also Jesus at Herod s court In the Gospel of Luke while Jesus is in Pilate s court Pilate realizes that Jesus is a Galilean and thus is under the jurisdiction of Herod Antipas 112 113 Given that Herod was in Jerusalem at that time Pilate decided to send Jesus to Herod to be tried 112 113 This episode is described only in the Gospel of Luke 23 7 15 114 115 116 117 While some scholars have questioned the authenticity of this episode given that it is unique to the Gospel of Luke the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia states that it fits well with the theme of the gospel 14 Herod Antipas a son of Herod the Great was born before 20 BC and was exiled to Gaul in the summer of AD 39 following a lengthy intrigue involving Caligula and Agrippa I the grandson of his father 118 119 This episode indicates that Jesus death took place before AD 39 120 121 Conversion of Paul Edit The Temple of Apollo in Delphi Greece where the Delphi Inscription was discovered early in the 20th century 122 123 Another approach to estimating an upper bound for the year of death of Jesus is the estimation of the date of conversion of Paul the Apostle which the New Testament accounts place some time after the death of Jesus 20 21 22 Paul s conversion is discussed in both the Letters of Paul and in the Acts of the Apostles 20 124 In the First Epistle to the Corinthians 15 3 8 Paul refers to his conversion The Acts of the Apostles includes three separate references to his conversion experience in Acts 9 Acts 22 and Acts 26 125 126 Estimating the year of Paul s conversion relies on working backwards from his trial before Junius Gallio in Achaea Greece Acts 18 12 17 around AD 51 52 a date derived from the discovery and publication in 1905 of four stone fragments as part of the Delphi Inscriptions at Delphi across the Gulf from Corinth 123 127 The inscription 128 preserves a letter from Claudius concerning Gallio dated during the 26th acclamation of Claudius sometime between January 51 and August 52 129 On this basis most historians estimate that Gallio brother of Seneca the Younger became proconsul between the spring of AD 51 and the summer of AD 52 and that his position ended no later than AD 53 122 123 127 130 131 The trial of Paul is generally assumed to be in the earlier part of Gallio s tenure based on the reference Acts 18 2 to his meeting in Corinth with Priscilla and Aquila who had been recently expelled from Rome based on Emperor Claudius expulsion of Jews from Rome which is dated to AD 49 50 127 132 According to the New Testament Paul spent eighteen months in Corinth approximately seventeen years after his conversion 123 133 Galatians 2 1 10 states that Paul went back to Jerusalem fourteen years after his conversion and various missions at times with Barnabas such as those in Acts 11 25 26 and 2 Corinthians 11 23 33 appear in the Book of Acts 20 21 The generally accepted scholarly estimate for the date of conversion of Paul is AD 33 36 placing the death of Jesus before this date range 20 21 22 Astronomical analysis Edit Newton s method Edit Isaac Newton deduced a methodology to date the crucifixion All four Gospels agree to within about a day that the crucifixion was at the time of Passover and all four Gospels agree that Jesus died a few hours before the commencement of the Jewish Sabbath i e he died before nightfall on a Friday Matt 27 62 28 1 Mark 15 42 Luke 23 54 John 19 31 42 In the official festival calendar of Judaea as used by the priests of the temple Passover time was specified precisely The slaughtering of the lambs for Passover occurred between 3pm and 5pm on the 14th day of the Jewish month Nisan corresponding to March April The Passover meal commenced at moonrise necessarily a full moon that evening i e at the start of 15 Nisan the Jewish day running from evening to evening Leviticus 23 5 Numbers 28 16 There is an apparent discrepancy of one day in the Gospel accounts of the crucifixion which has been the subject of considerable debate In John s Gospel it is stated that the day of Jesus trial and execution was the day before Passover John 18 28 and 19 14 Hence John places the crucifixion on 14 Nisan Likewise the Apostle Paul in his First Epistle to the Corinthians implies Jesus died on a 14 Nisan sacrificed as a Passover lamb 1 Cor 5 7 and was resurrected on the Jewish festival of the first fruits i e on a 16 Nisan 1 Cor 15 20 134 The correct interpretation of the Synoptics is less clear Thus some scholars believe that all 4 Gospels place the crucifixion on Friday 14 Nisan others believe that according to the Synoptics it occurred on Friday 15 Nisan The problem that then has to be solved is that of determining in which of the years of the reign of Pontius Pilate AD 26 36 the 14th and 15th Nisan fell on a Friday 25 In a paper published posthumously in 1733 Isaac Newton considered only the range AD 31 36 and calculated that the Friday requirement is met only on Friday 3 April AD 33 and 23 April AD 34 The latter date can only have fallen on a Friday if an exceptional leap month had been introduced that year but this was favoured by Newton 135 136 137 In the twentieth century the standard view became that of J K Fotheringham who in 1910 suggested 3 April AD 33 on the basis of its coincidence with a lunar eclipse 136 138 In 1933 Antonio Cabreira following a similar method arrived at the same date 139 as did in the 1990s Bradley E Schaefer and J P Pratt 135 140 Also according to Humphreys and Waddington the lunar Hebrew calendar leaves only two plausible dates within the reign of Pontius Pilate for Jesus death and both of these would have been a 14 Nisan as specified in the Gospel of John Friday 7 April AD 30 and Friday 3 April AD 33 A more refined calculation takes into account that the Hebrew calendar was based not on astronomical calculation but on observation of the lunar phases following criticism that it is possible to establish the phase of the moon on a particular day two thousand years ago but not whether it was obscured by clouds or haze 141 142 Including the possibility of a cloudy sky obscuring the moon and assuming that the Jewish authorities would be aware that lunar months can only be either 29 or 30 days long the time from one new moon to the next is 29 53 days then the refined calculation states that the Friday requirement might also have been met during Pontius Pilate s term of office on 11 April AD 27 Another potential date arises if the Jewish authorities happened to add an irregular lunar leap month to compensate for a meteorologically delayed harvest season this would yield one additional possibility during Pilate s time which is Newton s favoured date of 23 April AD 34 143 Colin Humphreys calculates but rejects these AD 27 and AD 34 dates on the basis that the former is much too early to be compatible with Luke 3 1 2 and spring AD 34 is probably too late to be compatible with Paul s timeline confirming Friday 7 April AD 30 and Friday 3 April AD 33 as the two feasible crucifixion dates 144 Eclipse method Edit Lunar eclipse 15 May 2022 Red hue caused by diffraction of sunlight through Earth s atmosphere A lunar eclipse is potentially alluded to in Acts of the Apostles 2 14 21 The sun shall be turned into darkness And the moon into blood Before the day of the Lord come as pointed out by physicist Colin Humphreys and astronomer Graeme Waddington There was in fact a lunar eclipse on 3 April AD 33 138 11 a date which coincides with one of Newton s astronomically possible crucifixion dates see above Humphreys and Waddington have calculated that in ancient Jerusalem this eclipse would have been visible at moonrise at 6 20 pm as a 20 partial eclipse a full moon with a potentially red bite missing at the top left of the moon s disc They propose that a large proportion of the Jewish population would have witnessed this eclipse as they would have been waiting for sunset in the west and immediately afterwards the rise of the anticipated full moon in the east as the prescribed signal to start their household Passover meals 25 Humphreys and Waddington therefore suggest a scenario where Jesus was crucified and died at 3pm on 3 April AD 33 followed by a red partial lunar eclipse at moonrise at 6 20pm observed by the Jewish population and that Peter recalls this event when preaching the resurrection to the Jews Acts of the Apostles 2 14 21 25 Astronomer Bradley Schaefer agrees with the eclipse date but disputes that the eclipsed moon would have been visible by the time the moon had risen in Jerusalem 140 145 146 A potentially related issue involves the reference in the Synoptic Gospels to a three hour period of darkness over the whole land on the day of the crucifixion according to Luke 23 45 toῦ ἡlioy ἐklipontos the sun was darkened Although some scholars view this as a literary device common among ancient writers rather than a description of an actual event 147 148 other writers have attempted to identify a meteorological event or a datable astronomical phenomenon which this could have referred to It could not have been a solar eclipse since this could not take place during the full moon at Passover 149 150 and in any case solar eclipses take minutes not hours 151 In 1983 astronomers Humphreys and Waddington noted that the reference to a solar eclipse is missing in some versions of Luke and argued that the solar eclipse was a later faulty scribal amendment of what was actually the lunar eclipse of AD 33 25 This is a claim which historian David Henige describes as undefended and indefensible 152 Humphreys and a number of scholars have alternatively argued for the sun s darkening to have been caused by a khamsin i e a sand storm which can occur between mid March and May in the Middle East and which does typically last for several hours 153 In a review 154 of Humphreys book theologian William R Telford points out that the non astronomical parts of his lunar eclipse argument are based on the assumption that the chronologies described in the New Testament are historical and based on eyewitness testimony accepting uncritically statements such as the three different Passovers in John and Matthew s statement that Jesus died at the ninth hour He also alleges that Humphreys uses two very dubious sources namely Pilate s alleged letter to Tiberius and the writings of the fifth century Bishop Cyril of Alexandria which Humphreys however classifies as forgery or contemporary interpretation indicative of a tradition at the time 155 Double Passover method Edit The rising full moon at sunset signals the start of the Passover meal This is two weeks after the new moon has heralded the start of the month of Nisan March April In the crucifixion narrative the synoptic gospels stress that Jesus celebrated a Passover meal Mark 14 12ff Luke 22 15 before his crucifixion which contrasts sharply with the independent gospel of John who is explicit that the official Jewish Passover John 11 55 started at nightfall after Jesus death In his 2011 book Colin Humphreys proposes a resolution to this apparent discrepancy by positing that Jesus synoptic Passover meal in fact took place two days before John s Jewish Passover because the former is calculated by the putative original Jewish lunar calendar itself based on the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar putatively introduced to the Israelites by Moses in the 13th century BC and still used today by the Samaritans The official Jewish Passover in contrast was determined by a Hebrew calendar reckoning which had been modified during the Babylonian exile in the 6th century BC This modified Hebrew calendar is in use among most Jews today One basic difference lies in the determination of the first day of the new month while the Samaritans use the calculated because by definition invisible new moon mainstream Jews use the first observation of the thin crescent of the waxing moon which is on average 30 hours later The other basic difference lies in the fact that the Samaritan calendar uses a sunrise to sunrise day while the official Hebrew calendar uses a sunset to sunset day Due to these differences the Samaritan Passover is normally one day earlier than the Jewish Passover and in some years two or more days earlier The crucifixion year of Jesus can then be calculated by asking the question in which of the two astronomically possible years of AD 30 and AD 33 is there a time gap between the last supper and the crucifixion which is compatible with the gospel timeline of Jesus last 6 days The astronomical calculations show that a hypothetical AD 30 date would require an incompatible Monday Last Supper while AD 33 offers a compatible Last Supper on Wednesday 1 April AD 33 followed by a compatible crucifixion on Friday 3 April AD 33 156 Given these assumptions he argues that the calculated date of Wednesday 1 April AD 33 for the Last Supper allows all four gospel accounts to be astronomically correct with Jesus celebrating Passover two days before his death according to the original Mosaic calendar and the Jewish authorities celebrating Passover just after the crucifixion using the modified Babylonian calendar In contrast the Christian church tradition of celebrating the Last Supper on Maundy Thursday would be an anachronism 157 158 The calculated chronology incidentally supports John s and Paul s narratives that Jesus died at the same hour Friday 3pm on 3 April AD 33 that the Passover lambs were slaughtered 159 Scholarly debate on the hour day and year of death Edit A Papyrus 90 fragment of John 19 The estimation of the time of the death of Jesus based on the New Testament accounts has been the subject of debate among scholars for centuries 160 The debate can be summarised as follows In the Synoptic account the Last Supper takes place on the first night of Passover defined in the Torah as occurring at twilight on 14 of Nisan and the crucifixion is the following day on 15 Nisan 161 However in the Gospel of John the trial of Jesus takes place before the Passover meal 162 and the sentencing takes place on the day of Preparation before Passover Some scholars have presented arguments to reconcile the accounts 163 although Raymond E Brown reviewing these concluded that they can not be easily reconciled 160 One involves the suggestion that 164 for Jesus and his disciples the Passover could have begun at dawn Thursday while for traditional Jews it would not have begun until dusk that same day 165 166 Another is that John followed the Roman practice of calculating the new day beginning at midnight rather than the Jewish reckoning 167 However this Roman practice was used only for dating contracts and leases 168 169 D A Carson argues that preparation of the Passover could mean any day of the Passover week 170 Some have argued that the modern precision of marking the time of day should not be read back into the gospel accounts written at a time when no standardization of timepieces or exact recording of hours and minutes was available 163 171 Andreas Kostenberger argues that in the first century time was often estimated to the closest three hour mark and that the intention of the author of the Mark Gospel was to provide the setting for the three hours of darkness while the Gospel of John seeks to stress the length of the proceedings starting in the early morning 172 Some scholars have argued that it is unlikely that the many events of the Passion could have taken place in the span from midnight to about 9 o clock in the morning 173 William Barclay has argued that the portrayal of the death of Jesus in the John Gospel is a literary construct presenting the crucifixion as taking place at the time on the day of Passover when the sacrificial lamb would be killed and thus portraying Jesus as the Lamb of God 174 This understanding fits with Old Testament typology in which Jesus entered Jerusalem to identify himself as the Paschal lamb on Nisan 10 was crucified and died at 3 00 in the afternoon of Nisan 14 at the same time the High Priest would have sacrificed the Paschal lamb and rose before dawn the morning of Nisan 16 as a type of offering of the First Fruits Colin Humphreys widely publicised double passover astronomical analysis published in 2011 and outlined above places the time of death of Jesus at 3pm on 3 April AD 33 and claims to reconcile the Gospel accounts for the six days leading up to the crucifixion His solution is that the synoptic gospels and John s gospel use two distinct calendars the official Jewish lunar calendar and what is today the Samaritan lunar calendar the latter used in Jesus day also by the Essenes of Qumran and the Zealots Humphrey s proposal was preceded in 1957 by the work of Annie Jaubert 175 who suggested that Jesus held his Last Supper at Passover time according to the Qumran solar calendar Humphreys rejects Jaubert s conclusion by demonstrating that the Qumran solar reckoning would always place Jesus Last Supper after the Jewish Passover in contradiction to all four gospels Instead Humphreys points out that the Essene community at Qumran additionally used a lunar calendar itself evidently based on the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar Humphreys suggests that the reason why his two calendar solution had not been discovered earlier is a widespread scholarly ignorance of the existence of the Egyptian liturgical lunar calendar used alongside the well known Egyptian administrative solar calendar and presumably the basis for the 13th century BC Jewish lunar calendar and b the fact that the modern surviving small community of Samaritans did not reveal the calculations underlying their lunar calendar preserving the Egyptian reckoning to outsiders until the 1960s In a review of Humphreys book theologian William R Telford points out that the non astronomical parts of his argument are based on the assumption that the chronologies described in the New Testament are historical and based on eyewitness testimony In doing so Telford says Humphreys has built an argument upon unsound premises which does violence to the nature of the biblical texts whose mixture of fact and fiction tradition and redaction history and myth all make the rigid application of the scientific tool of astronomy to their putative data a misconstrued enterprise 154 As Telford had pointed out in his own book in 1980 176 the initial three day structure found in Mark 11 is occasioned by the purely redactional linkage of the extraneous fig tree story with the triumphal entry and cleansing of the temple traditions and is not a chronology upon which one can base any historical reconstructions Chronological comparison between the Jesus Passion narratives according to the Gospels of Mark and JohnResurrection on the third day EditThe Gospels do not describe the resurrection but report the discovery of Jesus empty tomb very early on the first day of the week Mark 16 2 and subsequent appearances of Jesus A potential chronological contradiction arises in the fact that the resurrection is referred to as happening on the third day e g Matt 16 21 whereas elsewhere Matthew Matt 12 40 states that Jesus would be buried three days and three nights 177 The modern concept of zero as a number was introduced by Indian scholars only in the fifth century AD 178 so that for example the currently used Gregorian calendar does not have a year 0 and instead begins with the year AD 1 which is immediately preceded by 1 BC Applied to the reckoning of days in the absence of a day zero that is using inclusive counting many modern languages e g Greek Italian Spanish French Portuguese Welsh continue referring to two weeks as fifteen days 179 whereas in English which does observe zero and thus uses exclusive counting this space of time is referred to as a fortnight 180 Following general practice at the time the Gospels employ inclusive counting highlighted in Mt 27 62 64 the chief priests and the Pharisees went to Pilate Sir they said we remember that while he was still alive that deceiver said After three days Gr meta treis hemeras I will rise again So give the order for the tomb to be made secure until the third day Gr tes trites hemeras where Matthew uses after three days and until the third day interchangeably 181 Ancient estimates EditSee also Anno Domini Other estimates of the chronology of Jesus have been proposed over the centuries Hippolytus around AD 200 dates his birth as on Wednesday the eighth day to the Kalends of January 25 December in the 42nd year of Caesar Augustus 182 This may refer to 2 3 or 4 BC It is not certain how much knowledge Hippolytus had of the calendar at that time which was perturbed 183 There is some disagreement between manuscripts but in any case he seems to have believed that the incarnation was on the 25th of March and the birth nine months later 183 He dates the crucifixion to the 33rd year of the life of Christ on Friday 25 March of the 18th year of Tiberius The reign of Tiberius began in AD 14 but 25 March never fell on a Friday between AD 30 and AD 34 inclusively Eusebius in his work Historia Ecclesiae first published in AD 313 184 placed the birth of Jesus in the forty second year of Augustus reign and the twenty eighth after the subjugation of Egypt and the deaths of Antony amp Cleopatra i e in 3 BC 185 The 3rd 4th century Roman historian Lactantius states that Jesus was crucified on 23 March AD 29 186 Maximus the Confessor and Cassiodorus asserted that the death of Jesus occurred in AD 31 citation needed In AD 525 Dionysius Exiguus devised an Easter table to calculate the dates of Easter at a time when Julian calendar years were still being identified by naming the consuls who held office that year Dionysius himself stated that the present year was the consulship of Probus Junior which was 525 years since the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ 187 Thus Dionysius implied that Jesus incarnation occurred 525 years earlier 188 Bonnie J Blackburn and Leofranc Holford Strevens briefly present arguments for 2 BC 1 BC or AD 1 as the year Dionysius intended for the Nativity or incarnation Among the sources of confusion are 189 In modern times incarnation is synonymous with the conception but some ancient writers such as Bede considered incarnation to be synonymous with the Nativity The civil or consular year began on 1 January but the Diocletian year began on 29 August 30 August in the year before a Julian leap year There were inaccuracies in the lists of consuls There were confused summations of emperors regnal years It is not known how Dionysius established the year of Jesus s birth Two major theories are that Dionysius based his calculation on the Gospel of Luke which states that Jesus was about thirty years old shortly after the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar and hence subtracted thirty years from that date or that Dionysius counted back 532 years from the first year of his new table 190 191 192 The Anglo Saxon historian the Venerable Bede who was familiar with the work of Dionysius used Anno Domini dating in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People completed in AD 731 Both Dionysius and Bede regarded Anno Domini as beginning at the incarnation of Jesus but the distinction between Incarnation and Nativity was not drawn until the late 9th century when in some places the Incarnation was identified with Christ s conception i e the Annunciation on March 25 On the continent of Europe Anno Domini was introduced as the calendrical system of choice of the Carolingian Renaissance by the English cleric and scholar Alcuin in the late eighth century Its endorsement by Emperor Charlemagne and his successors popularizing this calendar throughout the Carolingian Empire ultimately lies at the core of the calendar s global prevalence today 193 See also EditChronology of the Bible Genealogy of Jesus Depiction of Jesus Historical Jesus Life of Jesus in the New Testament Outline of Jesus Timeline of ChristianityReferences Edit Andrew E Steinmann 2011 From Abraham to Paul A Biblical Chronology pp 235 238 St Louis Concordia a b c d John P Meier 1991 A Marginal Jew Rethinking the Historical Jesus v 1 The Roots of the Problem and the Person ch 11 A Chronology of Jesus Life pp 373 433 Anchor Bible Reference Library a b Dunn James D G 2003 Jesus Remembered Eerdmans Publishing 324 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b D A Carson Douglas J Moo amp Leon Morris 1992 An Introduction to the New Testament 54 56 Grand Rapids MI Zondervan Publishing House Michael Grant 1977 Jesus An Historian s Review of the Gospels p 71 Scribner s Ben Witherington III 1998 Primary Sources Christian History 17 3 12 20 Taylor Marshall 2012 The Eternal City pp 49 50 Dallas St John Press Molnar Michael The Star of Bethlehem The Legacy of the Magi 2013 a b c d e f g h Eerdman Publishing 2000 Eerdman s Dictionary of the Bible p 249 Amsterdam University Press ISBN 90 5356 503 5 a b c Craig A Evans 2003 The Bible Knowledge Background Commentary Matthew Luke volume 1 pp 67 69 ISBN 0 7814 3868 3 a b c d e f g h i j Paul L Maier The Date of the Nativity and Chronology of Jesus In Jerry Vardaman Edwin M Yamauchi 1989 Chronos kairos Christos nativity and chronological studies pp 113 129 ISBN 0 931464 50 1 a b c Craig Evans 2006 Josephus on John the Baptist In Amy Jill Levine et al Eds 2006 The Historical Jesus in Context pp 55 58 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00992 6 1 a b c d e Gillman Florence Morgan 2003 Herodias At Home in that Fox s Den pp 25 30 ISBN 978 0 8146 5108 7 a b c d Geoffrey W Bromiley 1982 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia volume E J pp 694 695 ISBN 0 8028 3782 4 2 a b c The Riddles of the Fourth Gospel An Introduction to John by Paul N Anderson 2011 ISBN 0 8006 0427 X p 200 a b c d e f Herod the Great by Jerry Knoblet 2005 ISBN 0 7618 3087 1 pp 183 184 a b J Dwight Pentecost 1981 The Words and Works of Jesus Christ A Study of the Life of Christ pp 577 578 Zondervan Funk Robert W Jesus Seminar 1998 The acts of Jesus the search for the authentic deeds of Jesus San Francisco Harper Paul William Meyer John T Carroll 2004 The Word in this world p 112 ISBN 0 664 22701 5 a b c d e f g Jesus amp the Rise of Early Christianity A History of New Testament Times by Paul Barnett 2002 ISBN 0 8308 2699 8 pp 19 21 a b c d Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament pp 77 79 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 a b c d Rainer Riesner 1997 Paul s early period chronology mission strategy theology pp 19 27 ISBN 978 0 8028 4166 7 Page 27 has a table of various scholarly estimates a b c d e f g The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 p 114 a b Sanders 1993 The Historical Figure of Jesus 11 249 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e Humphreys Colin J Waddington W G March 1985 The Date of the Crucifixion Journal of the American Scientific Affiliation 37 Quake Reveals Day of Jesus Crucifixion Live Science 28 May 2012 a b Jesus in history thought and culture an encyclopedia Volume 1 by James Leslie Houlden 2003 ISBN 1 57607 856 6 pp 508 509 3 Brown Raymond E 1994 The Death of the Messiah from Gethsemane to the Grave A Commentary on the Passion Narratives in the Four Gospels New York Doubleday Anchor Bible Reference Library p 964 ISBN 978 0 385 19397 9 Christology A Biblical Historical and Systematic Study of Jesus by Gerald O Collins 2009 ISBN 0 19 955787 X pp 1 3 Jesus as a Figure in History How Modern Historians View the Man from Galilee by Mark Allan Powell 1998 ISBN 0 664 25703 8 pp 168 173 a b Karl Rahner 2004 Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi pp 730 731 ISBN 0 86012 006 6 a b Interpreting Gospel Narratives Scenes People and Theology by Timothy Wiarda 2010 ISBN 0 8054 4843 8 pp 75 78 Paula Fredriksen 1999 Jesus of Nazareth King of the Jews pp 6 7 105 10 232 34 266 Alfred A Knopf Publishers Matthew by David L Turner 2008 ISBN 0 8010 2684 9 p 613 Sanders EP 1995 The Historical Figure of Jesus London Penguin Books 3 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Jesus and the Gospels An Introduction and Survey by Craig L Blomberg 2009 ISBN 0 8054 4482 3 pp 431 436 In a 2011 review of the state of modern scholarship Bart Ehrman wrote He certainly existed as virtually every competent scholar of antiquity Christian or non Christian agrees B Ehrman 2011 Forged writing in the name of God ISBN 978 0 06 207863 6 p 285 Ramm Bernard L 1993 An Evangelical Christology Ecumenic and Historic Regent College Publishing 19 There is almost universal agreement that Jesus lived a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Borg Marcus 1999 The Meaning of Jesus Two Visions Ch 16 A Vision of the Christian Life HarperCollins 236 some judgements are so probable as to be certain for example Jesus really existed a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b New Testament History by Richard L Niswonger 1992 ISBN 0 310 31201 9 pp 121 124 a b c Encyclopedia of theology a concise Sacramentum mundi by Karl Rahner 2004 ISBN 0 86012 006 6 p 731 Nikos Kokkinos 1998 in Chronos kairos Christos 2 by Ray Summers Jerry Vardaman ISBN 0 86554 582 0 pp 121 126 Murray Alexander Medieval Christmas History Today December 1986 36 12 pp 31 39 a b Hoehner Harold W 1978 Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ Zondervan pp 29 37 ISBN 978 0 310 26211 4 a b Jack V Scarola A Chronology of the nativity Era in Chronos kairos Christos 2 by Ray Summers Jerry Vardaman 1998 ISBN 0 86554 582 0 pp 61 81 Christianity and the Roman Empire background texts by Ralph Martin Novak 2001 ISBN 1 56338 347 0 pp 302 303 Ulrich Luz Die Geburtsgeschichten Jesu und die Geschichte Gottingen 2013 S 170 Freed Edwin D 2004 Stories of Jesus Birth Continuum International 119 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Schurer Emil A History of the Jewish People in the Time of Jesus Christ 5 vols New York Scribner s 1896 a b c Marshall Taylor The Eternal City Dallas St John 2012 pp 35 65 a b Steinmann Andrew From Abraham to Paul A Biblical Chronology St Louis Concordia 2011 pp 235 238 a b Barnes Timothy David The Date of Herod s Death Journal of Theological Studies ns 19 1968 204 219 a b Bernegger P M Affirmation of Herod s Death in 4 B C Journal of Theological Studies ns 34 1983 526 531 Josephus Wars 1 631 632 Josephus Wars 2 26 Hoehner Harold Herod Antipas Zondervan 1980 p 251 a b Beyer David 1998 Josephus Reexamined Unraveling the Twenty Second Year of Tiberius In Vardaman Jerry ed Chronos Kairos Christos II Chronological Nativity and Religious Studies in Memory of Ray Summers Mercer University Press pp 85 96 ISBN 978 0 86554 582 3 Edwards Ormond Herodian Chronology Palestine Exploration Quarterly 114 1982 29 42 Keresztes Paul Imperial Rome and the Christians From Herod the Great to About 200 AD Lanham Maryland University Press of America 1989 pp 1 43 Vardaman Jerry Yamauchi Edwin M eds 1989 The Nativity and Herod s Death Chronos Kairos Christos Nativity and Chronological Studies Presented to Jack Finegan 85 92 Finegan Jack Handbook of Biblical Chronology Rev ed Peabody MA Hendrickson 1998 300 516 a b Filmer W E Chronology of the Reign of Herod the Great Journal of Theological Studies ns 17 1966 283 298 Josephus Antiquities 17 6 4 Lunar eclipse of March 13 4 BC Catalog of Lunar Eclipses 0099 to 0000 eclipse gsfc nasa gov Steinmann Andrew 2009 When Did Herod the Great Reign Novum Testamentum 51 1 1 29 doi 10 1163 156853608X245953 JSTOR 25442624 Michael Grant Jesus An Historian s Review of the Gospels Scribner s 1977 p 71 Ben Witherington III Primary Sources Christian History 17 1998 No 3 12 20 Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible 2000 Amsterdam University Press ISBN 90 5356 503 5 p 249 a b Novak Ralph Martin 2001 Christianity and the Roman Empire Background Texts pp 302 303 ISBN 978 1 56338 347 2 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 p 72 Michael R Molnar The Star of Bethlehem The Legacy of the Magi Rutgers University Press 1999 page needed ISBN missing O Reilly Bill and Dugard Martin Killing Jesus A History Henry Holt and Company 2013 ISBN 0805098542 p 15 Raymond E Brown 101 Questions and Answers on the Bible Paulist Press 2003 p 79 Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum Charles L Quarles The Cradle the Cross and the Crown B amp H Publishing 2009 pp 139 140 Luke 1 5 New Testament Commentary by John MacArthur 2009 ISBN 0 8024 0871 0 p 201 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 p 64 a b c d The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 pp 140 141 Jesus and the Gospels An Introduction and Survey by Craig L Blomberg 2009 ISBN 0 8054 4482 3 pp 224 229 Christianity an introduction by Alister E McGrath 2006 ISBN 978 1 4051 0901 7 pp 16 22 Who is Jesus an introduction to Christology by Thomas P Rausch 2003 ISBN 978 0 8146 5078 3 page needed a b The building program of Herod the Great by Duane W Roller 1998 University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20934 6 pp 67 71 4 a b Lundquist John M 2007 The Temple of Jerusalem Past Present and Future pp 101 103 ISBN 978 0 275 98339 0 The biblical engineer how the temple in Jerusalem was built by Max Schwartz 2002 ISBN 0 88125 710 9 pp xixx xx Encyclopedia of the historical Jesus by Craig A Evans 2008 ISBN 0 415 97569 7 p 115 Andreas J Kostenberger John Baker Academic 2004 p 110 Jesus in Johannine tradition by Robert Tomson Fortna Tom Thatcher 2001 ISBN 978 0 664 22219 2 p 77 The new complete works of Josephus by Flavius Josephus William Whiston Paul L Maier ISBN 0 8254 2924 2 Ant 18 5 2 4 Women in scripture by Carol Meyers Toni Craven and Ross Shepard Kraemer 2001 ISBN 0 8028 4962 8 pp 92 93 5 Herod Antipas in Galilee The Literary and Archaeological Sources by Morten H Jensen 2010 ISBN 978 3 16 150362 7 pp 42 43 6 a b The Emergence of Christianity Classical Traditions in Contemporary Perspective by Cynthia White 2010 ISBN 0 8006 9747 2 p 48 Hoehner Harold W 1983 Herod Antipas p 131 ISBN 978 0310422518 Retrieved 18 July 2012 The relationship between John the Baptist and Jesus of Nazareth by Daniel S Dapaah 2005 ISBN 0 7618 3109 6 p 48 7 a b Herod Antipas by Harold W Hoehner 1983 ISBN 0 310 42251 5 pp 125 127 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia A D by Geoffrey W Bromiley 1995 ISBN 0 8028 3781 6 pp 686 687 Bromiley Geoffrey W 1995 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia Wm B Eerdmans Publishing vol K P p 929 Matthew 27 27 61 Mark 15 1 47 Luke 23 25 54 and John 19 1 38 a b Theissen 1998 pp 81 83 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 pp 104 108 Evans Craig A 2001 Jesus and His Contemporaries Comparative Studies ISBN 0 391 04118 5 p 316 Wansbrough Henry 2004 Jesus and the oral Gospel tradition ISBN 0 567 04090 9 p 185 James Dunn states that there is broad consensus among scholars regarding the nature of an authentic reference to the crucifixion of Jesus in the Testimonium Dunn James 2003 Jesus remembered ISBN 0 8028 3931 2 p 141 Skeptic Wells also states that after Shlomo Pines discovery of new documents in the 1970s scholarly agreement on the authenticity of the nucleus of the Tetimonium was achieved The Jesus Legend by G A Wells 1996 ISBN 0812693345 p 48 that Josephus made some reference to Jesus which has been retouched by a Christian hand This is the view argued by Meier as by most scholars today particularly since S Pines Josephus scholar Louis H Feldman views the reference in the Testimonium as the first reference to Jesus and the reference to Jesus in the death of James passage in Book 20 Chapter 9 1 of the Antiquities as the aforementioned Christ thus relating the two passages Feldman Louis H Hata Gōhei eds 1987 Josephus Judaism and Christianity ISBN 978 90 04 08554 1 p 55 Van Voorst Robert E 2000 Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 pp 39 42 Backgrounds of early Christianity by Everett Ferguson 2003 ISBN 0 8028 2221 5 p 116 Green Joel B 1997 The Gospel of Luke new international commentary on the New Testament Grand Rapids Mich W B Eerdmans Pub Co p 168 ISBN 978 0 8028 2315 1 Flavius Josephus Jewish Antiquities 18 89 Pontius Pilate portraits of a Roman governor by Warren Carter 2003 ISBN 0 8146 5113 5 pp 44 45 The history of the Jews in the Greco Roman world by Peter Schafer 2003 ISBN 0 415 30585 3 p 108 Backgrounds of early Christianity by Everett Ferguson 2003 ISBN 0 8028 2221 5 p 416 a b New Testament History by Richard L Niswonger 1992 ISBN 0 310 31201 9 p 172 a b Pontius Pilate portraits of a Roman governor by Warren Carter 2003 ISBN 978 0 8146 5113 1 pp 120 121 The Synoptics Matthew Mark Luke by Jan Majernik Joseph Ponessa 2005 ISBN 1 931018 31 6 p 181 The Gospel according to Luke by Michael Patella 2005 ISBN 0 8146 2862 1 p 16 Luke The Gospel of Amazement by Michael Card 2011 ISBN 978 0 8308 3835 6 p 251 Bible Study Workshop Lesson 228 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 18 July 2012 Herod Antipas by Harold W Hoehner 1983 ISBN 0 310 42251 5 p 262 All the people in the Bible by Richard R Losch 2008 ISBN 0 8028 2454 4 p 159 The Content and the Setting of the Gospel Tradition by Mark Harding Alanna Nobbs 2010 ISBN 0 8028 3318 7 pp 88 89 The Emergence of Christianity by Cynthia White 2010 ISBN 0 8006 9747 2 p 11 a b The Cambridge Companion to St Paul by James D G Dunn 10 November 2003 Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 0521786940 p 20 a b c d Paul his letters and his theology by Stanley B Marrow 1986 ISBN 0 8091 2744 X pp 45 49 Bromiley Geoffrey William 1979 International Standard Bible Encyclopedia A D Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Company pp 689 ISBN 0 8028 3781 6 Paul and His Letters by John B Polhill 1999 ISBN 0 8054 1097 X pp 49 50 The Blackwell Companion to Natural Theology by William Lane Craig James Porter Moreland 2009 ISBN 1 4051 7657 1 p 616 a b c Christianity and the Roman Empire background texts by Ralph Martin Novak 2001 ISBN 1 56338 347 0 pp 18 22 The Gallio Inscription Archived from the original on 12 October 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2012 John B Polhill Paul and His Letters B amp H Publishing Group 1999 ISBN 978 0805410976 p 78 The Greco Roman world of the New Testament era by James S Jeffers 1999 ISBN 0 8308 1589 9 pp 164 165 The Bible Knowledge Background Commentary Acts Philemon by Craig A Evans 2004 ISBN 0 7814 4006 8 p 248 The Bible Knowledge Commentary New Testament edition by John F Walvoord Roy B Zuck 1983 ISBN 0 88207 812 7 p 405 Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Amsterdam University Press 2000 ISBN 90 5356 503 5 p 1019 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 68 69 a b Pratt J P 1991 Newton s Date for the Crucifixion Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 32 3 301 304 Bibcode 1991QJRAS 32 301P 8 a b Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 45 48 Newton Isaac 1733 Of the Times of the Birth and Passion of Christ in Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel and the Apocalypse of St John Also at 9 a b Fotheringham J K 1910 On the smallest visible phase of the moon Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 70 527 531 Astronomical Evidence for the Date of the Crucifixion Journal of Theological Studies 1910 12 120 127 The Evidence of Astronomy and Technical Chronology for the Date of the Crucifixion Journal of Theological Studies 1934 35 146 162 Cabreira Antonio 1933 Determinacao Exacta da Data da Morte de Cristo An Exact Determination of the Date of the Death of Christ in Portuguese Lisbon Imprensa Libanio da Silva suc Sousa amp Sant Ana Lda a b Schaefer B E 1990 Lunar Visibility and the Crucifixion Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 31 1 53 67 Bibcode 1990QJRAS 31 53S C Philipp E Nothaft Dating the Passion The Life of Jesus and the Emergence of Scientific Chronology 200 1600 p 25 E P Sanders The Historical Figure of Jesus Penguin 1993 285 286 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 53 58 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 63 66 Schaefer B E July 1991 Glare and celestial visibility Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific pp 103 645 660 Marking time the epic quest to invent the perfect calendar by Duncan Steel 1999 ISBN 0 471 29827 1 p 341 David E Garland Reading Matthew A Literary and Theological Commentary on the First Gospel Smyth amp Helwys Publishing 1999 p 264 Vermes Geza 2005 The Passion Penguin pp 108 109 ISBN 9780141021324 Exploring Ancient Skies A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy by David H Kelley Eugene F Milone 2011 ISBN 1 4419 7623 X pp 250 251 Astronomy The Solar System and Beyond by Michael A Seeds Dana Backman 2009 ISBN 0 495 56203 3 p 34 Meeus J December 2003 The maximum possible duration of a total solar eclipse Journal of the British Astronomical Association 113 6 343 348 Henige David P 2005 Historical evidence and argument University of Wisconsin Press p 150 ISBN 978 0 299 21410 4 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 84 85 a b Telford William R 2015 Review of The Mystery of the Last Supper Reconstructing the Final Days of Jesus The Journal of Theological Studies 66 1 371 376 doi 10 1093 jts flv005 Humphreys 2011 p 85 Much apocryphal writing consists of highly theatrical literature which cannot be used as historical evidence if Pilate s report to Tertullian is a Christian forgery probably made up on the basis of Acts as seems likely then this suggests there was a tradition that at the crucifixion the moon appeared like blood Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 p 164 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 p 37 Staff Reporter 18 April 2011 Last Supper was on Wednesday not Thursday challenges Cambridge professor Colin Humphreys International Business Times Retrieved 18 April 2011 Colin Humphreys The Mystery of the Last Supper Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 521 73200 0 pp 192 195 a b Death of the Messiah Volume 2 by Raymond E Brown 1999 ISBN 0 385 49449 1 pp 959 960 Lev 23 5 6 Paul Barnett Jesus amp the Rise of Early Christianity A History of New Testament Times p 21 InterVarsity Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 8308 2699 5 a b Steven L Cox Kendell H Easley 2007 Harmony of the Gospels ISBN 0 8054 9444 8 pp 323 323 Stroes H R October 1966 Does the Day Begin in the Evening or Morning Some Biblical Observations Vetus Testamentum 16 4 460 475 doi 10 2307 1516711 JSTOR 1516711 Ross Allen Daily Life In The Time Of Jesus Hoehner Harold 1977 Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ Grand Rapids Zondervan Bibcode 1977calj book H Brooke Foss Westcott The Gospel according to St John the authorised version with introduction and notes 1881 p 282 Hunt Michal The Passover Feast and Christ s Passion 1991 revised 2007 Agape Bible Study Retrieved 17 January 2014 Leon Morris The New International Commentary on the New Testament The Gospel According to John Revised William B Eerdmans Publishing Company Grand Rapids Michigan Cambridge U K 1995 pp 138 708 D A Carson The Gospel According to John Eerdmans Grand Rapids 1991 p 604 New Testament History by Richard L Niswonger 1992 ISBN 0 310 31201 9 pp 173 174 The Cradle the Cross and the Crown An Introduction to the New Testament by Andreas J Kostenberger L Scott Kellum 2009 ISBN 978 0 8054 4365 3 p 538 Eugen Ruckstuhl 1965 Chronology of The Last Days of Jesus A Critical Study Trans from German pp 35 71 for The Chronology of More Than One Day William Barclay 2001 The Gospel of John Westminster John Knox Press p 340 ISBN 978 1 61164 015 1 La date de la cene Gabalda Paris WR Telford The Barren Temple and the Withered Tree A Redaction Critical Analysis of the Cursing of the Fig Tree Pericope in Mark s Gospel and its Relation to the Cleansing of the Temple Tradition Bloomsbury London 1980 Norman Geisler and Thomas Howe When Critics Ask A Popular Handbook on Bible Difficulties Wheaton Illinois Victor Books 1992 Ifrah Georges 2000 The Universal History of Numbers From Prehistory to the Invention of the Computer Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 39340 5 James Evans The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy Oxford University Press 1998 ISBN 019987445X Chapter 4 p 164 Fortnight The Concise Oxford Dictionary 5th ed 1964 p 480 Zarley Kermit 2006 The Third Day Bible Code Synergy Books 10 Hippolytus Commentary on Daniel PDF Archived from the original PDF on 31 December 2018 Retrieved 17 June 2020 Book 4 Paragraph 23 3 a b Thomas C Schmidt 2010 Hippolytus and the Original Date of Christmas Chronicon net Archived from the original on 22 September 2013 See also the comment by Kurt Simmons there Louth Andrew 1990 The date Of Eusebius Historia Ecclesiastica Journal of Theological Studies 41 1 111 123 doi 10 1093 jts 41 1 111 JSTOR 23964888 Eusebius AD 313 Historia Ecclesiae I 5 2 Lactantius Of the Manner In Which the Persecutors Died 2 In the latter days of the Emperor Tiberius in the consulship of Ruberius sic Geminus and Fufius Geminus and on the tenth of the kalends of April as I find it written Nineteen year cycle of Dionysius Introduction and First Argumentum Blackburn amp Holford Strevens 2003 p 778 Blackburn amp Holford Strevens 2003 pp 778 779 Teres Gustav October 1984 Time computations and Dionysius Exiguus Journal for the History of Astronomy 15 3 177 188 Bibcode 1984JHA 15 177T doi 10 1177 002182868401500302 S2CID 117094612 Tondering Claus The Calendar FAQ Counting years Mosshammer Alden A 2009 The Easter Computus and the Origins of the Christian Era Oxford pp 345 347 ISBN 9780191562365 Blackburn amp Holford Strevens 2003 p 881 Sources Edit Blackburn Bonnie Holford Strevens Leofranc 2003 The Oxford companion to the Year An exploration of calendar customs and time reckoning Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192142313 External links EditCatholic Encyclopedia 1910 Chronology of the Life of Jesus Christ Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chronology of Jesus amp oldid 1162794831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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