Fathers of the Faith · Historical Record

Flavius Josephus

c. 37 AD — c. 100 AD

Jewish priest, Pharisee, and Roman historian whose first-century writings stand as the most important non-biblical witness to the world of the New Testament — preserving records of Herod, John the Baptist, James the Just, and Jesus of Nazareth.

Biography His Writings Scripture Connections Notable Passages Timeline Scholarly Significance Read Online
Life & Background

Who Was Josephus?

Born a Priest

Born Yosef ben Matityahu in Jerusalem, c. 37 AD, to a priestly family of the first division. By his own account he was a prodigy in Jewish law, consulted by the chief priests while still a teenager.

Pharisee & Commander

Aligned himself with the Pharisees at age 19. In the First Jewish–Roman War (66–73 AD) he commanded Jewish forces in Galilee, surrendered to Vespasian, and prophesied the general would become emperor.

Roman Citizen

Vespasian freed him when his prophecy proved true. He took the Roman name Flavius Josephus, settled in Rome under imperial patronage, and spent the rest of his life writing history in Greek.

Apologist for His People

His primary aim was to explain Judaism to the Greco-Roman world and to defend Jewish history and culture against slander — making his works an invaluable bridge between the Hebrew world and classical antiquity.

Josephus is the single most important non-Christian source for the world of the New Testament. Writing within living memory of the events he describes — and drawing on earlier records, eyewitness accounts, and his own experience — he provides irreplaceable historical texture for the Gospels, Acts, and Revelation: the Temple Mount, the Herods, the high-priestly dynasties, the Zealots, the Essenes, the Roman prefects, and the social conditions that shaped the ministry of Jesus.

His usefulness to Christian scholarship is not because he was a believer — he was not — but precisely because he was a detached, Roman-sponsored Jewish historian who had every reason to omit, and in some passages chose to include, figures central to the New Testament narrative.

The Corpus

His Four Major Works

The Jewish War

c. 75 AD · 7 Books

Written first in Aramaic for Jewish readers in Parthia and Mesopotamia, then translated into Greek. It is the primary historical account of the First Jewish–Roman War (66–73 AD), culminating in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple in 70 AD and the fall of Masada in 73 AD.

Josephus was an eyewitness to the siege of Jerusalem. His account — however shaped by Roman patronage — remains irreplaceable for understanding the fulfillment of Jesus' prophecy in Luke 21 and the context of the book of Revelation.

Book I — Hasmoneans to Herod
Book II — Herod's Death to the War
Book III — Vespasian's Campaign
Book IV — Fall of Galilee
Book V — Siege of Jerusalem
Book VI — Destruction of the Temple
Book VII — Masada & Aftermath
Biblical Connection: Jesus' prophecy — "not one stone will be left upon another" (Matt. 24:2, Luke 21:6) — is documented in historical detail by Josephus in Books V–VI. The Temple's destruction in 70 AD is one of the most precisely corroborated prophetic fulfillments in Scripture.

Jewish Antiquities

c. 93 AD · 20 Books

The magnum opus. A comprehensive history of the Jewish people from Creation through the First Jewish–Roman War, modeled on Dionysius of Halicarnassus' Roman Antiquities. Written for Gentile readers in Rome, it parallels the Hebrew Bible in Books I–XI and continues through intertestamental and New Testament-era events in Books XII–XX.

This is the work that contains the most theologically significant passages for Christians — the references to John the Baptist, James, and the famous Testimonium Flavianum regarding Jesus.

Books I–II — Creation to Joseph
Books III–IV — Moses & the Law
Books V–VI — Conquest to Saul
Books VII–VIII — David & Solomon
Books IX–X — Divided Kingdom to Exile
Book XI — Return from Babylon
Book XII — Hasmonean Period
Books XIII–XIV — Maccabees & Rome
Books XV–XVII — Herod the Great
Books XVIII–XX — NT Era & War

Life of Josephus

c. 99 AD · Autobiography

An autobiographical appendix to Antiquities, written in response to rival historian Justus of Tiberias, who had published a competing account of the Jewish War. It focuses primarily on Josephus' controversial role as military commander in Galilee and his ultimate surrender to Rome.

Valuable for understanding Josephus' own biases and the social complexity of first-century Jewish society — particularly the fractured loyalties between different Jewish factions (Pharisees, Sicarii, Zealots) that shaped the political climate of Jesus' ministry.

Against Apion

c. 97 AD · 2 Books

An apologetic treatise defending the antiquity and excellence of the Jewish people and their Scriptures against Greco-Egyptian antisemitic polemicists, particularly a grammarian named Apion. It is Josephus at his most polemical and theological.

Significant for Christian scholarship because it contains Josephus' defense of the Hebrew canon and his methodology for evaluating historical sources — demonstrating the reliability standards applied to ancient documents including the Old Testament books.

Canon Significance: In Against Apion I.8, Josephus lists 22 books of the Hebrew canon (equivalent to the 39 books of the Protestant Old Testament, using combined counting), providing first-century external confirmation of the scope of the Jewish Scriptures.
External Corroboration

Biblical Figures in Josephus

Josephus mentions or describes the following biblical figures and events in his works — each entry providing external historical evidence for the New Testament record.

Person / Event Josephus Reference Biblical Reference Notes
Herod the Great Antiquities XV–XVII; War I Matt. 2:1–19; Luke 1:5 Extensive biography including massacre of sons, building campaigns, death
Herod Antipas Antiquities XVIII.5.2 Matt. 14; Mark 6; Luke 3:19 Confirms Antipas ruled Galilee; names Herodias and Philip
John the Baptist Antiquities XVIII.5.2 Matt. 3; Mark 1; Luke 3; John 1 Describes John as righteous, his baptism, his execution by Antipas
Jesus of Nazareth Antiquities XVIII.3.3 (Testimonium Flavianum) All four Gospels Disputed passage; scholarly consensus: partially original with later Christian interpolations
James, brother of Jesus Antiquities XX.9.1 Acts 15; Gal. 1:19; James 1:1 Widely accepted as authentic; names James and his execution under Ananus
Pontius Pilate Antiquities XVIII.3; War II.9 Matt. 27; John 18–19; 1 Tim. 6:13 Confirms his tenure, cruelty, and eventual removal from office
Annas & Caiaphas Antiquities XVIII.2.2; XX.9.1 Luke 3:2; John 18; Acts 4:6 Confirms high-priestly succession and family dynasty
Felix & Festus Antiquities XX.7–8; War II Acts 23–26 Confirms their procuratorships and the turbulent conditions of Paul's trials
Herod Agrippa I Antiquities XIX; War II Acts 12:1–24 Confirms his kingship and sudden death — Josephus' account parallels Acts 12:20–23
Herod Agrippa II Antiquities XX; War II Acts 25–26 Confirms his rule and his sister Bernice — corroborating the setting of Paul's hearing
The Pharisees & Sadducees Antiquities XIII.5.9; XVIII.1 Matt. 3, 12, 23; Acts 23 Describes both sects' beliefs, including resurrection controversy (Acts 23:6–8)
The Essenes War II.8; Antiquities XIII.5 Background for Dead Sea Scrolls community Detailed description of community structure, purity laws, shared property
Destruction of Jerusalem War V–VI Luke 21:5–24; Matt. 24:1–2 Fulfillment of Jesus' prophecy documented in forensic detail by eyewitness
Theudas the false prophet Antiquities XX.5.1 Acts 5:36 Confirms Gamaliel's reference to Theudas; chronology differs slightly — debated
Judas the Galilean Antiquities XVIII.1.1; XX.5.2 Acts 5:37 Confirms Gamaliel's reference; described as founder of the "Fourth Philosophy" (Zealots)
Primary Sources

Notable Passages

Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man… He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. He was the Christ. And when Pilate had condemned him to the cross… he appeared to them alive again the third day…
Antiquities XVIII.3.3 — The Testimonium Flavianum (as traditionally transmitted)
Scholarly Note on the Testimonium: Most scholars today accept that Josephus wrote something about Jesus here, but that later Christian scribes added or amplified language (e.g., "He was the Christ," resurrection claim). The partially-interpolated text, when stripped of likely additions, still constitutes significant independent attestation of Jesus' existence, ministry, execution under Pilate, and the early Christian movement.
Festus was now dead, and Albinus was but upon the road; so he [Ananus the high priest] assembled the sanhedrin of judges, and brought before them the brother of Jesus who was called Christ, whose name was James, and some others… and delivered them to be stoned.
Antiquities XX.9.1 — Reference to James, brother of Jesus (widely accepted as authentic)
Now some of the Jews thought that the destruction of Herod's army came from God, and that very justly, as a punishment of what he did against John, that was called the Baptist; for Herod slew him, who was a good man…
Antiquities XVIII.5.2 — John the Baptist (widely accepted as authentic)
When therefore the city was taken, in the second year of the reign of Vespasian, on the eighth day of the month Gorpiaios… the number of the captives taken during the whole war amounted to ninety-seven thousand; as was the number of those that perished during the whole siege eleven hundred thousand.
Jewish War VI.9.3 — Fall of Jerusalem, 70 AD
We have but twenty-two books containing the history of all time, books that are justly believed in, and among them there are not any disagreements. Five of them belong to Moses… the prophets who came after Moses wrote down what was done in their times in thirteen books. The remaining four books contain hymns to God and precepts for the conduct of human life.
Against Apion I.8 — Description of the Hebrew Canon
Chronology

Life & Works Timeline

c. 37 AD
Born Yosef ben Matityahu in Jerusalem to a priestly, aristocratic family.
c. 53 AD
At age 16, studies with the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes; aligns with the Pharisees by age 19.
64 AD
Travels to Rome on a diplomatic mission to secure release of imprisoned Jewish priests — encounters the empire firsthand.
66 AD
First Jewish–Roman War begins. Josephus appointed commander of Jewish forces in Galilee.
67 AD
Captured by Vespasian at Jotapata after 47-day siege. Prophesies Vespasian will become emperor; held as prisoner.
69 AD
Vespasian declared emperor. Josephus freed, takes the name Flavius Josephus, accompanies Titus to Jerusalem.
70 AD
Jerusalem and the Second Temple destroyed. Josephus witnesses the siege as Roman interpreter and intermediary.
c. 75 AD
Publishes The Jewish War in Rome under imperial patronage of Vespasian and Titus.
c. 93 AD
Publishes Jewish Antiquities in 20 books — his magnum opus including references to Jesus, John, and James.
c. 97–99 AD
Publishes Against Apion and Life of Josephus.
c. 100 AD
Dies in Rome. His works survive entirely through Christian manuscript tradition — preserved because of their value to Christian apologists.
Why It Matters

Scholarly Significance for Christians

External Attestation of Jesus

The Testimonium Flavianum (partial) and the James passage provide the earliest non-Christian literary references to Jesus — from a Jewish historian writing within living memory of the events.

Corroboration of Acts

Characters and events in Acts — Felix, Festus, Agrippa I & II, the Egyptian prophet, Theudas, Judas the Galilean — are independently confirmed, strengthening the historical credibility of Luke's authorship.

Prophecy Fulfillment Record

Josephus' detailed account of Jerusalem's destruction in 70 AD, written by an eyewitness, constitutes the most precise external documentation of a prophecy of Jesus (Matt. 24, Luke 21) in history.

First-Century Jewish Context

No other single source provides as much detail about the Temple, the priesthood, Jewish sects, Roman governance, and social conditions that formed the backdrop of Jesus' ministry.

Old Testament Canon Witness

His description in Against Apion I.8 confirms the Jewish canonical boundary as 22 books (= 39 Protestant OT), providing a first-century witness against the expanded Deuterocanon.

Preserved by the Church

Josephus' writings survived entirely because the early Church — Origen, Eusebius, Jerome — copied and transmitted them. The Church recognized his value for apologetics from the second century onward.

Key Caution: Josephus was a Roman-sponsored Jewish historian, not a Christian. He must be read critically — his pro-Roman bias, his self-justification of his own surrender, and the known Christian interpolations in the Testimonium require careful scholarly handling. His value is as a corroborating external voice, not as a theological authority.

Primary Texts

Read Josephus Online — Free Public Domain

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The Works of Josephus — William Whiston Translation (1737)

The standard English translation for four centuries. Complete text of all four works. Available free via Project Gutenberg and CCEL.

Read at CCEL →
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Jewish War — Complete Text (Whiston)

All seven books of the Jewish War, with chapter and paragraph references.

Read at University of Chicago →
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Jewish Antiquities — Complete Text (Whiston)

All twenty books. Includes Books XVIII–XX critical for New Testament cross-reference.

Read at University of Chicago →
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Against Apion

Complete apologetic treatise defending Jewish history and Scripture against Greco-Roman critics.

Read at University of Chicago →
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Life of Josephus (Autobiography)

His self-defense and account of his Galilean command during the Jewish War.

Read at University of Chicago →
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Internet Archive — Complete Works (Multiple Editions)

Scanned original print editions including 19th-century scholarly annotations. Multiple translation versions available.

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