lol. Appealing to Tacitus Annals 15.44. [snipped for space
Another issue with Tacitus often over looked is what the
Christians themselves say not too long after Tacitus supposedly wrote his passage.
In the apocryphal
Acts of Paul (c. 160 CE) the Christians state that Nero starting burning Christians to death around the death of Paul (i.e., 67 CE) because Nero has seen some guy named Patroclus who had supposedly died and was told that Christ Jesus would "overthrow all kingdoms" and this man was now a solder in Jesus' army (so the Christians themselves have Nero reacting to a possible attempt at overthrowing his government).
Then you have "The Acts of Peter" (late 2nd century CE) which claims Nero considered to "destroy all those brethren who had been made disciples by Peter" but had a dream after Peter's death (either 64 or 67 CE) which said 'you cannot now persecute or destroy the servants of Christ.' and a frightened Nero 'kept away from the disciples . . . and thereafter the brethren kept together with one accord . . .'.
So the
Christians themselves in the mid to late 2nd century have NO knowledge of Nero using them as scapegoats for the burning of Rome. Never mind neither Pliny the Elder or Josephus noticed the Christians in Rome.
So not only do non-Christians (Pliny the Elder and Joephsus) who were in Rome at the time not notice Nero's persecution of Christians for the burning of Rome, but the Christians themselves appear to be unaware of it as well and instead give two wildly contradictory accounts — either Nero killed Christians with Paul some three years after the fire because he was told this cult would "overthrow all kingdoms" by one of their members, or he had a dream resulting in him leaving them alone which could have been as early as 64...the year of the fire.
Why would the Christians themselves themselves be ignorant of Nero going after them in a bid to shift blame for the Fire of Rome? It not like even in the mid to late 2nd century Nero was regarded as a good emperor beloved by all his subjects.
More over why would Tacitus be aware of events even the Christians themselves didn't know of and NONE of his contemporaries or people actual in Rome c64 knew of?
Now to be fair Josephus does say he "was in the twenty-sixth year of my age, it happened that I took a voyage to Rome". This means his voyage started in either 63 CE (the year
before the Great Fire) or 64 CE (the year of the Great Fire). More over his trip to Rome was "through a great number of hazards by sea; for as our ship was drowned in the Adriatic Sea, we that were in it, being about six hundred in number, swam for our lives all the night; when, upon the first appearance of the day, and upon our sight of a ship of Cyrene, I and some others, eighty in all, by God's providence, prevented the rest, and were taken up into the other ship."
Josephus also notes when he returned home he "perceived innovations were already begun, and that there were a great many very much elevated in hopes of a revolt from the Romans." Now this revolt actually started in 66 CE so we have a reasonable time window for Josephus being in Rome: 63 to 64 CE
The issue is could Josephus been in Rome July 64 CE and omitted the Fire because it didn't relate to him personally or did he leave Rome before the Fire broke out? His main comment on Nero is
"But I omit any further discourse about these affairs; for there have been a great many who have composed the history of Nero; some of which have departed from the truth of facts out of favor, as having received benefits from him; while others, out of hatred to him, and the great ill-will which they bare him, have so impudently raved against him with their lies, that they justly deserve to be condemned." - Antiquities 20.8.3
and doesn't really settle the issue.
But to accept Tacitus passage as real we have to have Pliny the Elder not know of Nero going after Christians for the burning of Rome, Josephus not know of it or regard it word repeating as there were far better sources on the matter of Nero's reign, and the Christians themselves having no knowledge of this major event until Sulpicius Severus in the early part of the 5th century writes about and yet one lone Roman in the 2nd century knew about it....forget bridges in New York I have a great deal on perpetual motion machines.
