let me cast this article before you.TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
From the article: a Roman census was taken in Egypt, and therefore perhaps also throughout the empire regularly, every fourteen years...LIB,MR BEARS said:let me cast this article before you.TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.LIB,MR BEARS said:let me cast this article before you.TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Not to mention the uprooting and mass transit of people across the empire to get them to their ancestral homes for one day, it surely would have been reocorded somewhere.El Oso said:From the article: a Roman census was taken in Egypt, and therefore perhaps also throughout the empire regularly, every fourteen years...LIB,MR BEARS said:let me cast this article before you.TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
The next paragraph then tries to make it look like Luke just referenced the wrong one of two census'. Unfortunately, if you do the math he does--it doesn't add up to 14 years--so it isn't a matter of referencing the wrong one.
The counter argument:
https://www.webpages.uidaho.edu/ngier/census.htm
"In the days of Hadrian and his successors down through the Severans (ad i 17-235) Roman emperors pursued a grand strategy based on preclusive security - the establishment of a linear barrier of perimeter defence around the Empire. The legions were stationed in great fortresses… https://t.co/PLgvw6uBml pic.twitter.com/4mg2BGi2Kv
— LiorLefineder (@lefineder) December 15, 2025
TexasScientist said:Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.LIB,MR BEARS said:let me cast this article before you.TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
TexasScientist said:Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
The question is not whether there were ever Roman censuses, but rather was there one during the times of Jesus's conflicting birth naratives, much less was there ever one that required the residents of the Roman Empire to travel and register at the locality of their ancestral homes (1,000 years prior)? Of course the answer is there was none - nada nunca.
Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
read through all of Wes Huff's commentsTexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
Today’s #manuscirptmonday includes a number of manuscripts from Luke and Matthew that span from the 2nd to the 5th centuries. Including copies of Josephus from the Middle Ages into the modern era. Today’s post looks at some of the questions surrounding the historical validity and… pic.twitter.com/IUVg0DdnbZ
— Wes Huff (@WesleyLHuff) December 23, 2024
The only surviving mystery religion of the Roman Empire https://t.co/63wPtB9Ckk pic.twitter.com/EkQSVMZwQh
— Edward Badgette (@acrimonyand) December 25, 2024
Tfw you think you’re eating enough protein but you learn that you’re falling short of a Roman legionnaire’s intake https://t.co/07xwnVYH1W
— Lee (Greater) (@shortmagsmle) January 12, 2026
Imagine roman engineers at the time discussing this in latin, proceeding to just use it without even leaving any written document. pic.twitter.com/I1UxDLtST2
— VIKARE (@vikare06) January 20, 2026
Last stand of the retired veterans at the Temple of Claudius
— Herald of Rome (@HeraldOfRome) January 22, 2026
- Boudica's sack of Camulodunum AD 60 pic.twitter.com/JJoPHF507s
1st-century coverage of Germany and of Germans.
— LiorLefineder (@lefineder) January 23, 2026
"violent rain and wind came up that separated them still further, while the ground, that had become slippery around the roots and logs, made walking very treacherous for them, and the tops of the trees kept breaking off and falling… https://t.co/cpX5INuub0
Location of every city founded by the Roman Empire, outside of Italy. pic.twitter.com/BTdKO5wnCB
— Vintage Maps (@vintagemapstore) January 28, 2026
By the end of the 4th century AD, the Romans were already aware they were living in the ruins of a lost world. This was written by the Roman writer Vegetius: pic.twitter.com/3MKENgMvjX
— Roman Helmet Guy (@romanhelmetguy) February 8, 2026
Sam Lowry said:TexasScientist said:Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
The question is not whether there were ever Roman censuses, but rather was there one during the times of Jesus's conflicting birth naratives, much less was there ever one that required the residents of the Roman Empire to travel and register at the locality of their ancestral homes (1,000 years prior)? Of course the answer is there was none - nada nunca.
Luke was a smart guy and would have understood that. So would his audience. There's no reason to infer such a mass uprooting from the text. More likely Joseph simply owned property in Bethlehem. Nor do we even know that the registration mentioned in the gospel was a census. There were other types of registration, e.g. loyalty oaths, that were required of Roman subjects from time to time.
TexasScientist said:Sam Lowry said:TexasScientist said:Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
The question is not whether there were ever Roman censuses, but rather was there one during the times of Jesus's conflicting birth naratives, much less was there ever one that required the residents of the Roman Empire to travel and register at the locality of their ancestral homes (1,000 years prior)? Of course the answer is there was none - nada nunca.
Luke was a smart guy and would have understood that. So would his audience. There's no reason to infer such a mass uprooting from the text. More likely Joseph simply owned property in Bethlehem. Nor do we even know that the registration mentioned in the gospel was a census. There were other types of registration, e.g. loyalty oaths, that were required of Roman subjects from time to time.
Luke 2:1-3 records that Caesar Augustus ordered a census (or enrollment) of the Roman world. Luke 2 1 In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. 2 (This was the first census that took place while[a] Quirinius was governor of Syria.) 3 And everyone went to their own town to register.
Sam Lowry said:TexasScientist said:Sam Lowry said:TexasScientist said:Johnny Bear said:TexasScientist said:LIB,MR BEARS said:TexasScientist said:
Was the purported Roman Census that brought Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem invented history?
let me cast this article before you.
It is certainly not "empirical" evidence. Perhaps it shouldn't be empirical evidence you seek though.
https://crossexamined.org/really-census-time-caesar-augustus/
Seems to me they are grasping at straws in this explanation.
Seems to me you are constantly grasping at straws to justify your atheistic beliefs.
The question is not whether there were ever Roman censuses, but rather was there one during the times of Jesus's conflicting birth naratives, much less was there ever one that required the residents of the Roman Empire to travel and register at the locality of their ancestral homes (1,000 years prior)? Of course the answer is there was none - nada nunca.
Luke was a smart guy and would have understood that. So would his audience. There's no reason to infer such a mass uprooting from the text. More likely Joseph simply owned property in Bethlehem. Nor do we even know that the registration mentioned in the gospel was a census. There were other types of registration, e.g. loyalty oaths, that were required of Roman subjects from time to time.
Luke 2:1-3 records that Caesar Augustus ordered a census (or enrollment) of the Roman world. Luke 2 1 In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. 2 (This was the first census that took place while[a] Quirinius was governor of Syria.) 3 And everyone went to their own town to register.
It was some kind of registration..
"Then the poor, deprived of their land, were no longer eager for military service and had few children, so that soon all Italy was bereft of freemen and filled with gangs of foreign slaves, through whom the rich cultivated their estates, having driven away the free citizens."… pic.twitter.com/aKyQcqwjti
— The Knowledge Archivist (@KnowledgeArchiv) February 18, 2026