DOMITIAN’S PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIANS?

DomitianPMW 2024-018 by Mark Wilson

Was Roman emperor Domitian really the great persecutor of Christians?

As I revisited a critical biography of the Roman emperor Domitian by the scholar Brian W. Jones recently,1 I was reminded that “alternative facts” and “fake news” are not just a contemporary phenomenon. On occasion ancient writers similarly tried to spin their version of the truth. Jones tackles the familiar line that Domitian, who reigned between 81 and 96 C.E., was a great persecutor of Christians. This “fact” is now standard stock in much popular writing on the book of Revelation and is even found in some scholarly tomes. In his discussion, Jones carefully rehearses how this “fact” developed.

Eusebius in his Church History (CH) provides the first reference to Domitian persecuting the church. Writing over three centuries later in the early fourth century C.E., this ancient Christian historian first quotes Melito of Sardis, who mentioned that Domitian brought slanderous accusations against Christians (CH 4.26.9). He also cites Tertullian, who claimed that Domitian was cruel like the emperor Nero (r. 54–68 C.E.), but that Domitian was more intelligent, so he ceased his cruelty and recalled the Christians he had exiled (CH 3.20.9). Eusebius also quotes Irenaeus, who claimed Domitian’s persecution consisted only of John’s banishment to Patmos and the exile of other Christians to the island of Pontia (CH 3.18.1, 5).


Before Jerusalem Fell Lecture
DVD by Ken Gentry

A summary of the evidence for Revelation’s early date. Helpful, succinct introduction to Revelation’s pre-AD 70 composition.

See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com


Despite these cautious statements by three earlier authors, Eusebius then spun his own alternative fact by claiming that Domitian, like Nero, had “stirred up persecution against us” (“anekinei diōgmon”; CH 3.17). From here the tradition was enlarged by Orosius (d. 420 C.E.), who, in his History Against the Pagans, wrote that Domitian issued edicts for a general and cruel persecution (7.10.5). Despite a lack of evidence, Jones observes that the tradition concerning Domitian’s persecution persists: “From a frail, almost non-existent basis, it gradually developed and grew large.”2 Thus the alternative facts sown by these ancient historians grew to a truism of Christian history.

No pagan writer of the time ever accused Domitian, as they had Nero, of persecuting Christians. Pliny, for example, served as a lawyer under Domitian and wrote in a letter to Trajan (r. 98–117 C.E.) that he was never present at the trial of a Christian (Letters 10.96.1). This is a strange claim for one of Domitian’s former officials if Christian persecution were so prevalent. The archaeologist Julian Bennett, who has written a biography of Trajan, also fails to mention any general persecution of Christians at this time. Domitian’s execution of Clemens has sometimes been linked to the senator’s apparent “atheism,” a term sometimes given to Christians. However, there is no “smoking gun” linking Clemens’s death to Christian persecution.3 So Jones concludes, “No convincing evidence exists for a Domitianic persecution of the Christians.”4 . . . .

Note: To finish the article and to see all the footnotes, please click: https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/biblical-topics/post-biblical-period/domitian-persecution-of-christians/


As It is Written FRONT

As It Is Written: The Genesis Account Literal or Literary?
Book by Ken Gentry

Presents the exegetical evidence for Six-day Creation and against the Framework Hypothesis. Strong presentation and rebuttal to the Framework Hypothesis, while demonstrating and defending the Six-day Creation interpretation.

See more study materials at: www.KennethGentry.com


Mark Wilson is the director of the Asia Minor Research Center in Antalya, Turkey, and is a popular teacher on BAS Travel/Study tours. Mark received his doctorate in Biblical studies from the University of South Africa (Pretoria), where he serves as a research fellow in Biblical archaeology.

8 thoughts on “DOMITIAN’S PERSECUTION OF CHRISTIANS?

  1. Benjamin iSAAC Sherrill's avatar
    Benjamin iSAAC Sherrill March 5, 2024 at 9:36 am

    Dr. Gentry! When I try to follow the link to finish the article it shows me an error? Blessings!

  2. Thomas Lee's avatar
    Thomas Lee March 5, 2024 at 9:56 am

    Link to rest of the article doesn’t go to anything.

  3. Gustavo González's avatar
    Gustavo González March 5, 2024 at 10:07 am

    Hello Dr. Gentry and team. The button to finish reading the article is not working. It takes to an “error” page.

  4. Kenneth Gentry's avatar
    Kenneth Gentry March 5, 2024 at 10:28 am

    Thanks for notifying me. I have fixed that, though I couldn’t use the standard means to do so!

  5. Kenneth Gentry's avatar
    Kenneth Gentry March 5, 2024 at 10:28 am

    This is fixed now. Sorry about that.

  6. Kenneth Gentry's avatar
    Kenneth Gentry March 5, 2024 at 10:28 am

    Fixed now. Sorry about that.

  7. Noble Berean II's avatar
    Noble Berean II June 18, 2024 at 8:59 am

    The book on The Story of Christianity: Volume I, chapter 6, also discounts the traditional view of Domition‘s widespread persecution of the church, although it lends credence to the late date of Revelation. That history also made a case that Nero‘s persecution was more localized and intensified in Rome and not widespread in the Roman Empire.

  8. Noble Berean II's avatar
    Noble Berean II October 29, 2024 at 8:00 am

    Good informative article. I believe it makes a good case in refuting the claims of Domitian’s widespread persecution of Christians, of which, I think it is perpetuated by some evangelicals to bolster the late date of Revelation’s authorship to support their eschatology.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.