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2007-01-31 04:28:39 · 14 answers · asked by blake h 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

14 answers

According to scriptural history....about 30 or 31 AD.

2007-01-31 04:32:24 · answer #1 · answered by primoa1970 7 · 0 0

Josephus, a Jewish historian, mentioned Jesus in his writings toward the end of the first century C.E., roughly 60 years after Jesus' death.
As a non-Christian, Josephus would have no reason to accept the historical reality of Jesus unless there was some sound basis for it.
In one of his works, Josephus discusses disturbances that were caused by the Jews during the time Pontius Pilate was governor of the region of Judea (26-36 C.E,) The disturbance centered around a man named Jesuss and his followers, Josephus identifies Jesus as "a wise man....a doer of wonderful works, a teacher of men who received the truth with pleasure," and he notes that Jesus was later condemned by Pilate to crucifixion. While this mention of Jesu does not suggest that Josephus himself accepted Jesus or the claim made about Jesus by his followers, it does seem clear that Josephus recognized Jesus to be a historical person who had a profound impact on the people he encountered.

Read also about Tacitus, a Roman historian.....Pliny the Younger another Roman source and Suetonius a Roman historian and lawyer.
All these writers prove the historical existence of Jesus......rather than biblical sources.

2007-02-03 06:45:35 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Jesus Christ died on the day the Passover Lambs were sacrificed. That would be on the 14th of the Hebrew month, Nisan (also called Abib). A proof I read a long time ago, places the year of Christ's crucifixion in A.D. 31. The following is an excerpt from that proof:

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Proof One: The CALENDAR Tells When

Here is the chart, which can be verified by any work on the "Jewish Calendar,” ABSOLUTELY CORRECT ACCORDING TO THE EXACT AND INSPIRED COMPUTATION PRESERVED SINCE THE DAYS OF MOSES!

Passover Dates:
A.D. 29, Saturday, April 16
A.D. 30, Wednesday, April 5
A.D. 31, Wednesday, April 25
A.D. 32, Monday, April 14
A.D. 33, Friday, April 3

To place the Passover on a Friday in 30 A.D. is to violate one of the inspired rules of the calendar – that no common year of the sacred calendar may have 356 days. Common years of twelve months may be only 353, 354 or 355 days long – a fact you can verify in the Jewish Encyclopedia. Theologians place the Passover of 30 A.D. on Friday, April 7 – 356 days after the Passover of 29 A.D. Count it for yourself! This date is two days late. The Passover in 30 A.D. was only 354 days after that of 29 A.D.

These scholars forget that God had His sacred calendar, together with the Bible, preserved since the days of Moses to this very day – and that every date of the Passover may be infallibly determined!

Moreover, astronomers recognize that the 14th of the month Nisan could have occurred on Wednesday in 30 A.D., as well as in 31 A.D. – but the theologians will not receive their testimony because of their human traditions.

Thus, if you want to believe that the crucifixion were in 30 A.D. – which it was NOT – you would still have to admit that Friday is NOT the day of the crucifixion!

For the year 31 A.D. several references, unacquainted with God’s calendar, mistakenly give the Passover, Nisan 14, as Monday, March 26. But this is one month too early. The year 30-31 A.D. was intercalary – that is, it had 13 months – thus placing the Passover thirty days later in 31 A.D., and on a Wednesday!

During the time of Christ and up to 142 A.D., according to the rules of the Sacred Calendar, the Passover could not occur earlier than six days after the vernal equinox – which in that year occurred on March 23, about 3 a.m. Greenwich time. Remember, in Jesus’ day the equinox did not occur on March 21, but on March 22 or 23, because the Roman world was using the Julian calendar. Since March 26 was only three days after the equinox, it could not have been the Passover. Hence in 31 A.D. the Passover was 30 days later on a Wednesday – and this is the ONLY POSSIBLE YEAR in which Christ could have been crucified, as we shall now PROVE.

(The CRUCIFIXION was NOT on FRIDAY!; by Herman L. Hoeh; 1959)

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The paper goes on to show that the exact date was April 25, 31 A.D..

2007-01-31 10:09:37 · answer #3 · answered by BC 6 · 0 0

About from 30 - 33 AD

2007-01-31 04:33:43 · answer #4 · answered by FAUUFDDaa 5 · 0 0

The Messiah Yahoshua most probably died in the year we now calculate to be A.D. 29. There is some doubt, but based on the death of the Herod who was in charge when the Messiah was born, that seems the best guess. We are told (Ex.23:13) not to use pagan names, of with Iesus is one. There was no "J" until 1400 A.D. so clearly there was no "J" in the Savior's name!

2007-01-31 04:35:09 · answer #5 · answered by hasse_john 7 · 0 0

I don't believe in dead God, nevertheless Jesus is alive and not yet dead. He will return to this world before doomsday and would die a natural death.

2007-02-01 21:30:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

33 AD

2007-01-31 04:33:02 · answer #7 · answered by Gods child 6 · 1 1

Nothing is known for sure...it can be 34, 33 or else...the calendar suffered a lot of changes...

2007-01-31 04:39:16 · answer #8 · answered by tatal_nostru2006 5 · 0 1

most believe 33 AD

2007-01-31 04:32:50 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The year 33 of our common era. 33 C.E.

2007-01-31 04:32:42 · answer #10 · answered by surfchika 4 · 0 1

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