TynBull 1972-23-04 Wenham PeterInRome
TynBull 1972-23-04 Wenham PeterInRome
TynBull 1972-23-04 Wenham PeterInRome
By JOHN WENHAM
On the day when this article was begun, The Times (16.3.72)
on its front page carried a headline across five columns: 'Scroll
fragments put accepted date of the Gospels in doubt.' It referred
to an article in Biblica 53 (1972) by J. O'Callaghan which
reported the finding at Qumran of what was apparently a
fragment of St Mark's Gospel, to be dated only about twenty
years after the death of Christ. Whether this identification is
confirmed or not, time will tell; but the possibility of such a
discovery shows how urgent it is that those who believe in
early dates for the Synoptic Gospels should state their reasons.
From the point of view of Christian apologetics the importance
of the question as to whether to date these Gospels in the 70s,
80s and 90s on the one hand, or in the 40s and 50s on the
other, can scarcely be exaggerated.
There are two solid arguments for early dates. Firstly, in all
three the fall of Jerusalem is forecast at great length, but no
suggestion is made that the prophecy had been fulfilled at the
time of writing. This is an argument from silence, but it is
quite difficult to imagine that the fulfilment of so cataclysmic
a prophecy should have been passed by without mention. (By
contrast it will be observed that the fulfilment of the prophecy
of world famine in Acts 11:28 is immediately mentioned.)
Secondly, the argument (associated especially with A.
Harnack) for dating Acts in 62,1 at the point where the story
ends, is cogent. The reader waits breathlessly to hear what
happens at Paul's trial, but is never told. Harnack's argument
is said to be facile, but the alternatives are unconvincing; they
derive their force from the belief (which I am sure is correct)
that Luke's Gospel was written before Acts and that it made
1
The exact chronology is not important. The table on p. 102 is based on F. F.
Bruce's dating in Acts, Tyndale Press, London (1951), 55f., which on the whole
seems more satisfactory than that of G. Ogg, The Chronology of the Life of Paul,
Epworth Press, London (1968), 200. Many of the dates are approximate only.
DID PETER GO TO ROME IN AD 42? 95
use of Mark, and from the belief (which I question) that Mark
could not have existed at so early a date. Luke's Gospel, which the
prologue suggests was the result of careful research, is better
dated before the shipwreck (in which all manuscripts would
have been destroyed) than after. Luke was nearby during
Paul's two-year stay at or near Caesarea about 57-59, and
this would make a very suitable period for the final preparation
of his material for publishing.2 Is it conceivable that Mark was
written even earlier?
It is hardly conceivable if we take seriously (as we must) the
strong tradition that Mark's Gospel in some way represents
the teaching of Peter in Rome, and if we take the usually
accepted view that Peter did not get to Rome until the 60s.
If howeveras I wish to arguewe put Peter's first visit to
Rome in 42, the whole position is revolutionized.
I have to confess that such an idea had never made any
serious impact on my mind till a couple of years ago, when I
chanced upon a popular book by G. R. Balleine, entitled
Simon Whom He Surnamed Peter (Skeffington, London, 1958),
which argued that the 'another place' to which Peter went
after he had been released from prison in Acts 12:17 was
Rome. The idea was so novel and the implications so far-
reaching that I felt scarcely able to trust my own judgment in
the matter. Further reflection, however, has made me feel that
the case is sound and that it should again become a subject
for serious study by Christian scholars.
Admittedly there is a great weight of authority to discourage
it. Here are typical statements by fairly conservative scholars:
C. S. C. Williams: 'the Roman Catholic Church claims that
Peter went at an early date to Rome and spent twenty-five
years there, but there is no evidence for this. . . . The tradition
. . . is abandoned by the best Roman Catholic scholars.'
E. G. Selwyn: 'The tradition . . . is on many grounds improb-
able.' F. F. Bruce : 'The tradition . . . is contradicted by the
evidence of the N.T.' Most important is the verdict of J. B.
Lightfoot, whose truly magisterial handling of the material
2
The beginning and end are recorded in Acts 25 and 27, which are 'we'
passages. Incidentally J. D. M. Derrett's studies in Law in the New Testament,
Darton, Longman & Todd, London (1970) pay particular attention to Luke's
minutely accurate preservation of Jewish and Palestinian elements in the teaching
of Jesus.
96 TYNDALE BULLETIN
Chronological Table
Crucifixion AD 30 Galatians written 48
Paul's first visit to Jerusalem 35 Apostolic Council in Jerusalem 49
Agrippa becomes King 41 Claudius expels Jews from Rome 49
Arrest and escape of Peter 42 Romans written 57
Death of Agrippa 44 Paul detained at Caesarea 57-59
Peter back in Jerusalem 46 Luke written 59
Mark written? 46 Paul detained in Rome 60-62
Paul and Barnabas take famine Acts written 62
relief to Jerusalem 46 Death of Paul 65?
Paul's first missionary journey 47-48 Death of Peter 67?
Peter visits Antioch 48
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and Galatians and Romans Paul's rectifying of the misunderstanding. James is
no answer to Paul, but Paul is to James.
10
Gal. 2:1-10. This assumes that Galatians was written before the apostolic
council in Acts 15. If it was written after, it would involve the improbable con-
clusion that Paul ignored the findings of the council, in spite of the fact that they
lent massive support to his argument against the necessity for Gentile circumcision.
In contrast, when Romans came to be written eight years after the Council, the
question had ceased to be a burning issue.