Does anyone know where he was before he went to Patmos? Is there any evidence?
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Yes, but it strikes me that most books on the subject are silent as to where he was before Patmos, which I find very interesting. I'm wondering how people fill in the blanks.You're the Johannine Scholar. I think the tradition teaches that John was pastor over the Ephesian churches. But this could have occurred after his stint on Patmos. I am of the opinion that he was on Patmos as a younger man and Revelation was written before his gospel (and before 70AD).
You're the first to mention the Rome tradition in the two threads I created on this, which is interesting as I thought it was better known. I've never heard the Colosseum story--I searched on Google books and it seems that the story floats around but evidence is never given for it. I'm glad your brought it up.According to Tertullian (in The Prescription of Heretics) John was banished (presumably to Patmos) after being plunged into boiling oil in Rome and suffering nothing from it. It is said that all in the audience of Colosseum were converted to Christianity upon witnessing this miracle. This event would have occurred in the late 1st century, during the reign of the Emperor Domitian, who was known for his persecution of Christians.
Yes, but it strikes me that most books on the subject are silent as to where he was before Patmos, which I find very interesting. I'm wondering how people fill in the blanks.
According to Tertullian (in The Prescription of Heretics) John was banished (presumably to Patmos) after being plunged into boiling oil in Rome and suffering nothing from it. It is said that all in the audience of Colosseum were converted to Christianity upon witnessing this miracle. This event would have occurred in the late 1st century, during the reign of the Emperor Domitian, who was known for his persecution of Christians.
He seems to make John exiled from Rome, during Nero's reign.Have you read Philip Schaff on the issue?
This is a different discussion, though I would accept that John the Elder and John the Seer are one and the same--that is the testimony of people who actually knew John, like Papias.One the great error embraced by church people is the false identification of the Johannine seer with John the son of Zebedee. This error is based on 3 false claims:
(1) that the apostle is "the disciple whom Jesus loved" (and the resulting false claim that John brought Jesus' mother with him to Ephesus: I have visited the House of the Virgin Mary near Ephesus. It is a revered shrine, but is not Mary's house.)
Even Raymond Brown (author of a 2 volume magisterial commentary on John) later recanted his identification there of the Beloved Disciple as the apostle John.
(2) that the author of Revelation is the same as the author of the Fourth Gospel.
The literarily poor Greek of Revelation is radically different from that of the Fourth Gospel and is laced with Semitisms that point to a Palestinian origin for the John who authored it.
(3) that John the son of Zebedee, John the Elder, and John the seer of Revelation are the same person. At the end of the 2nd century, there is a lamentable tendency to conflate NT figures into one person. Besides all the Johns, Philip the apostle is conflated with Philip the evangelist and Mary Magdalene is conflated with Martha's sister, Mary, and the prostitute of Luke 7:36-50.
(1)-(3) represent the current scholarly consensus.
This is a different discussion, though I would accept that John the Elder and John the Seer are one and the same--that is the testimony of people who actually knew John, like Papias.
He identifies the Seer with the Evangelist.Papias implicitly distinguishes John the Elder from John the son of Zebedee, but neither he nor any early church father identifies John the Elder as John the Seer.
Does anyone know where he was before he went to Patmos? Is there any evidence?
No, I didn't 'concede' them. I have never claimed otherwise.First, prove your claim with a quote.
Second, you just conceded my 2 points.
He was at Ephesus.Does anyone know where he was before he went to Patmos? Is there any evidence?
It takes only a little common sense, the Apostle John pastured the church at Ephesus until he was so old he had to be carried to church on a mat. Since he is no longer the pastor he was considered an elder. He was still an Apostle and still the writer of Revelations.Papias implicitly distinguishes John the Elder from John the son of Zebedee, but neither he nor any early church father identifies John the Elder as John the Seer.