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Cyberseeker
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:choocho:… as is the case with Cyberseeker, your delusions are not only ego-syntonic but ego-reinforcing, so apparently there is no hope.
:choocho:… as is the case with Cyberseeker, your delusions are not only ego-syntonic but ego-reinforcing, so apparently there is no hope.
You may be interested in how Jimmy Akin deduced Christ death on AD33 biblically. No external sources at all. I haven’t spotted any logic errors yet. And it rests entirely on 2 points:I have place my conclusion to this problem on the Hermeneutics Stack website. My purpose in coming here is because I appreciate the feedback from Christians who are familiar with the Church Fathers. Thank you for your replies so far.
Tertulian (being a Roman) would have used a Roman calendar system of dating reigns of emperors. So, the part year of AD 14 would have been considered Tiberius’ accession, and AD 15 would have been year 1, and so on. Hence the Lord would have been revealed in AD 26. It would have referred to his baptism in the year that John began baptising, and by the time Jesus came out of his wilderness temptation, the beginning his ministry would have been early AD 27.
So Tertulian’s system** fits well with an AD 30 crucifixion**. There is a growing consensus among Bible scholars that this date fits the facts better than the other popular option of AD 33. Also, the Tertulian schema, **does not contradict the gospel of Luke **as first appears. Yes, Tiberius became sole emperor on the death of his adoptive father, Augustus in AD 14. However, it is a well-known fact that he had become **co-regent **with his ailing father two years earlier in AD 12. In that year, he was made supreme military commander over Caesar’s armies and provinces. Ancient coins from Antioch dated AD 12 display the head of Tiberius and documents attest to his reign being fully in force from that time. Thus, his inauguration in AD 14 as emperor was only a formalisation of a reign that had begun two years earlier.
Therefore, the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius (as Luke put it) would make Jesus’ baptism AD 26, just the same as Tertulian’s conclusion, albeit by a different method of getting there. Neither Luke or Tertulian were mistaken!![]()
Jimmy Akin has done his homework,The complete list of the days between A.D. 29 and 36 on whose evenings Passover began:
So only 2 possible dates are available since we know Jesus was crucified on a Friday.Code:Monday, April 18, A.D. 29 Friday, April 7, A.D. 30 Tuesday, March 27, A.D. 31 Monday, April 14, A.D. 32 Friday, April 3, A.D. 33 Wednesday, March 24, A.D. 34 Tuesday, April 12, A.D. 35 Saturday, March 31, A.D. 36
That is why I say Tertulian’s “12th year” is right, and Luke’s “15th year” is also right, when Luke’s count is taken from Tiberius’ co-regency.Since Jesus ministry started on the 15th year of Tiberius reign i.e. 29AD, 30 AD is out as that would make his ministry too short. That leave us with 33 AD.
Both are right, but they begin counting from different start-points.