- A: Impossible to exactly know.
- Dr. Michael Heiser argued that Jesus’ birth date can be dialed down to a 90-minute period on September 11, 3 BCE using astrology.(edited)
- A number of assumptions are needed to make it work:
- john of patmos has knowledge of jesus’s birth that the gospel authors and others lacked, particularly since it contradicts matthew (before 4 BCE) and luke (after 6 CE).
- revelation is using astrological symbolism
- he’s interpreted these astrological symbols correctly
- there is something significant about this arrangement of astronomical bodies.
- Obviously, Heiser doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
- Historically, people either thought 1 BCE or 4 BCE.
- ━━━ Why 1 BCE?
- The 1 BCE date begins to appear in Christian chronographical thought in the mid-200s CE, in the pseudo-Cyprianic De Pascha computus 18-23 which dates to 243, and later in Eusebius’ Armenian chronicle (early 300s), and the Chronography of 354, actually based on material dating to 336, in the ‘fasti consulares’ section.
- ━━━ What early Christians thought about Jesus’ dates?
- no extant writers had access to any information beyond what’s in the gospels, specifically the opening chapters of Matthew and Luke. atthew and Luke quote four sets of chronological markers, and most of them disagree with each other.
- Matthew 2 dates Jesus’ birth to the reign of Herod the Great, who died in 4 BCE: that is, Jesus was born in 4 BCE or earlier.
- Luke 1.5-38 dates John the Baptist’s conception to Herod’s reign, and Jesus’ conception 6 months later.
- Luke 2.1-2 dates Jesus’ birth to the governorship of Quirinius, that is, 6 CE or later.
- Luke 3.1-3 and 3.23 dates the start of Jesus’ ministry to ‘Tiberius 15’, that is, 29 CE, and states that he was 30 at the time, which inidicates a birth year of 1 BCE (or perhaps a little earlier).
- We have four other 1st-2nd century sources that comment on Jesus’ dates: Josephus, Tacitus, Justin Martyr, and Irenaeus. They contain no information beyond beyond what’s in the gospels. Literally all they say is that Jesus died during Tiberius’ reign, as in Luke 3. Irenaeus repeats this in three different places, in contexts where he’s clearly trying to make a point about chronological precision, and that makes it clear that it’s the limit of his information.
Around Clement of Alexandria he disccuses dating in (Stromateis 1.21.144-146):
- How then, did ancient Christians come up with a date of 1 BCE?
- The synoptic gospels (Mark, Matthew, and Luke) refer to a darkness at the time of Jesus’ death which lasted from midday until the ninth hour, that is, about three hours. Starting in the 100s, some people started trying to link this darkness to a solar eclipse. The earliest is Thallos, whose work is lost (BNJ 256 F 1). Tertullian (ca. 200), Julius Africanus (220s), Origen (ca. 250), and Eusebius (early 300s) all discuss this interpretation, and so do several later writers. By the 220s people were trying to tie this darkness to a specific eclipse, one that took place in 29 CE. The information they had about the 29 CE eclipse came from a pagan writer, Phlegon of Tralles, who apparently reported it in a lost chronographical work called the Olympiads (BNJ 257 T 16a-e).
- Calendar-era systems.
- The 29 CE eclipse couldn’t possibly have coincided with Jesus’ death.
- according to Phlegon (so everyone says) there was an eclipse in 29 CE;
- Jesus’ death coincided with that eclipse;
- Luke 3 says Jesus was 30 when he began his ministry;
- Luke refers to only one Passover, so – Jesus was still around 30 at the time of his death;
- Jesus was born 30 years before 29 CE
- Why the modern ‘consensus’ of 4 BCE?
- The following points are likely to be central to modern arguments putting Jesus’ birth in 4 BCE:
- Herod is the one chronological marker that appears in both Matthew and Mark, and Herod died in 4 BCE.
- Luke says Jesus was 30 at start of his ministry. And the gospel of John refers to 3 Passovers during Jesus’ ministry. And if every gospel is telling the exact truth without error, that must mean Jesus was 33 when he died.
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