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93
Eusebius,
Eccl. Hist.
3.20.8—9; see Clement,
Quis div. salv.
42; Jerome,
De Viris illustribus
9.

94
Robinson,
Redating,
222—23; Gentry,
Before Jerusalem Fell,
102—4; B. Newman, “The Fallacy of the Domitian Hypothesis,”
NTS
10 (1963): 135—36; A. A. Bell, “The Date of John's Apocalypse: The Evidence of Some Roman Historians Reconsidered,”
NTS
25 (1978): 93-102; Wilson, “Problem of the Domitianic Date,” 587-605.

95
Robinson,
Redating,
221.

96
Swete,
Revelation,
xcix; Charles,
Revelation of St. John,
1:xci; Collins,
Crisis and Catharsis,
56; Thompson,
Book of Revelation,
15.

97
Hort,
Apocalypse of St. John,
xx; see Robinson,
Redating,
221.

98
See Collins,
Crisis and Catharsis,
54.

99
The island was about 30 miles in circumference according to Pliny the Elder,
Nat.
4.12.23,
69;
Strabo,
Geog.
10.5.13; see Thucydides,
Peloponnesian War
3.33.3.

100
Pliny the Elder,
Nat.
4.12.69; Strabo,
Geog.
10.5.14.

101
Aune,
Revelation 1—5, 77;
Smalley,
Revelation to John,
50; Boxall,
Revelation,
86.

102
Boxall,
Revelation,
85. Against Keener,
Revelation,
83; C. H. Talbert,
The Apocalypse: A Reading of the Revelation of John
(Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 1994), 3; J. N. Sanders, “St. John on Patmos,”
NTS
9 (1963): 75-85; Swete,
Revelation,
12; Charles,
Revelation of St. John,
vols. 1, 2.

103
See Aune,
Revelation 1—5,
77-78; Boxall,
Revelation,
86.

104
Every occurrence of
dia
in the accusative case in Revelation expresses cause or reason (1:9; 2:3; 4:11;
6:9;
7:15; 12:11-12; 13:14; 17:7; 18:8,10,15; 20:4).

105
See
6:9;
12:17; 20:4. Against Beckwith,
Apocalypse of John,
434; Charles,
Revelation of St. John,
1.22; Aune,
Revelation 1-5,
81-82.

106
BDAG,
s.v. "
θλίψις,
" 457.

107
The inference is that John was there as a result of judicial condemnation. Smalley,
Revelation to John,
50; Swete,
Revelation,
50.

108
Plutarch,
Exil.
12; Juvenal,
Sat.
1.73; 4.563; 10.170; Tacitus,
Ann.
1.53; 3.68-59; 4.13,30; 13.43; Suetonius, Aug. 19;
Cal.
14-15;
Galb.
10.

109
Dig.
48.13.3; 48.14.1; 48.22.6; 48.22.14.3; 48.22.15; 48.22.7.2; Tacitus,
Ann.
14.50; 15.71; Pliny,
Ep.
10.56. See J. Crook,
Law and Life of Rome
(Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press, 1967), 272—73; Aune,
Revelation 1—5, 79.

110
A. N. Sherwin-White,
Roman Society and the Roman Law in the New Testament
(London: Oxford Univ. Press, 1963; repr. Eugene: Wipf & Stock, 2004), 21, n. 1.

111
Crook,
Law and Life of Rome,
272.

112
See Dig.
47.11-22; cf. A. N. Sherwin-White, “The Early Persecutions and Roman Law Again,”
JTS
3 (1952): 205.

113
Dig.
48.22.7.17; cf. Sherwin-White,
Roman Society and the Roman Law, 2.

114
Dig.
48.19.2.1. Although the governor could not deport a criminal, the city prefect retained that legal right.

115
Tertullian,
Praescr.
36; see Jerome,
De Viris illustribus
9. Against W. M. Ramsay,
The Letters to the Seven Churches of Asia and Their Place in the Plan of the Apocalypse
(London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1904), 85.

116
Caird,
Revelation of St. John,
22—23, affirmed by Hemer,
Letters to the Seven Churches,
28; Smalley,
Revelation to John,
50-51; Boxall,
Revelation,
85.

117
The road connecting the cities formed a horseshoe-shaped circuit, and each city could be reached within a day or two by foot. See deSilva,
Lntroduction,
895.

118
P. L. Mayo,
“Those Who Call Themselves Jews”: The Church and Judaism in the Apocalypse of John,
PTMS 60 (Eugene: Pickwick, 2006), 51—76; A. J. Beagley,
The “Sitz im Leben” of the Apocalypse, with Particular Reference to the Role of the Church's Enemies,
BZNW 50 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1987); P. Borgen, “Polemic in the Book of Revelation,” in
Anti-Semitism and Early Christianity,
ed. C. A. Evans and D. A. Hagner (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993), 199—211; M. R. J. Bredin, “The Synagogue of Satan Accusation in Revelation 2:9,”
BTB
28/4 (1999): 160-64; Slater, “Social Setting,” 240; A. Y. Collins, “Vilification and Self-Definition in the Book of Revelation,”
HTR
79 (1986): 308-20; id.,
Crisis and Catharsis,
85-87.

119
On suffering in poverty brought about by their faith, see Hemer,
Letters to the Seven Churches,
68; Charles,
Revelation of St. John,
1.56; Caird,
Revelation of St. John,
35; Roloff,
Revelation,
48; cf. 4QpPSa 1.1-10; 2.10-11.

120
J. Lambrecht (“Jewish Slander: A Note on Revelation 2,9-10,”
ETL
75 [1999]: 421-29) saw this slander from Jews as stemming from legal proceedings in Smyrna. For a discussion of the bringing of a charge by an accuser in Roman jurisprudence, see “Accusatio,” in A. Berger,
Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law,
Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 43 (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1953), 340.

121
NT examples of Jews instigating legal action against Christians include Acts 13:5—12,50; 18:13—17; 22:30; 23:25—30; 24:1—22; 25:1,7—27; 26:1—7. For examples of general Jewish hostility against Christians, see Acts 7:1—8:3; 9:1—9; Gal 1:13-14; 1 Thess 2:14-16; cf.
The Martyrdom of Polycarp
(12:2-3; 13:1); Justin Martyr
(Dial.
16.4; 47.4; 93.4; 95.4; 96.2; 108.3;110.5; 131.2; 133.6; 137.2); Tertullian
(Scorp.
10.10;
Praescr.
26.6); and Eusebius
(Eccl. Hist.
5.16.12).

122
Beale,
Book of Revelation,
8, 240; Ford,
Revelation,
393; S. Applebaum, “The Legal Status of the Jewish Communities in the Diaspora,” in
The Jewish People in the First Century,
CRINT 1, ed. M. de Jonge and S. Safrai (Assen: Van Gorcum, 1974), 420—63; T. Rajak,
Jewish Rights in the Greek Cities Under Roman Rule: A New Approach,
Approaches to Ancient Judaism 5 (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1985), 19—35; P. Trebilco,
Jewish Communities in Asia Minor,
SNTSMS
69
(Cambridge: University Press, 1991), 167—85; and Price,
Rituals and Power,
220—21; cf. Josephus,
Apion
2.6; Philo,
Legat.
349—67.

123
See J. J. O'Rourke, “Roman Law and the Early Church,” 179. For more on the relationship between the church and the synagogue, see Aune,
Revelation 1—5,
168—72; Borgen, “Polemic in the Book of Revelation,” 199—211; W. Horn, “Zwischen der Synagoge des Satans und dem neuen Jerusalem: Die christlich-jüdische Standortbestimmung in der Apokalypse des Johannes,”
ZRGG
46 (1994): 143—62. Cf. S. J. Friesen, “Sarcasm in Revelation 2—3: Churches, Christians, True Jews, and Satanic Synagogues,” in
The Reality of Apocalypse: Rhetoric and Politics in the Book of Revelation,
SBLSymS 39, ed. D. L. Barr (Atlanta: SBL, 2006), 127—46; P. Duff, “The ‘Synagogue of Satan’: Crisis Mongering and the Apocalypse of John,” in
Reality of the Apocalypse,
147-68. Cf. Justin,
Dial.
16.4; 47.4; 93.4; 95.4; 96.2; 108.3; 133.6; 137.2.

124
S. J. Friesen (“Satan's Throne, Imperial Cults and the Social Settings of Revelation,”
JSNTS
27 [2005]: 351—73) implausibly rejected the notion that “Satan's throne” refers to Pergamum as the seat of Roman power or of the imperial cult in the province of Asia.

125
According to Aune
(Revelation 1—5,
183), the Roman proconsul resided in Pergamon; cf. Caird,
Revelation of St. John,
38.

126
The term
rhomphaia
(“sword”) may refer to the judicial right of
iusgladii,
symbolized as a sword, giving the proconsul the right to inflict capital punishment (Rom 13:4). See
Dig.
2.1.3; Berger, “Ius gladii,”
EDRL
529; Ramsay,
Letters to the Seven
Churches, 292—93; Caird,
Revelation of St. John,
38; Mounce,
Book of Revelation, 96;
Hemer,
Letters to the Seven Churches,
85; Beale,
Book of Revelation,
247; Keener,
Revelation,
122. The term
thronos
(“throne”), as used elsewhere in the NT, denotes an official seat where a king or judge conducted court (Matt 19:28; Luke 1:23,52; see Smalley,
Revelation to John,
68; Swete,
Revelation,
34). Occasionally,
thronos
is used for a judge's bench (Aune,
Revelation 1—5,
183; see Plutarch,
Praec. ger. reipubl.
807b).

127
For more on the rise and history of the imperial cult, see J. Ferguson,
The Religions of the Roman Empire
(London: Thames & Hudson, 1970), 88-98; D. L. Jones, “Christianity and the Roman Imperial Cult,”
ANRW II.23.2, Principat,
ed. H. Temporini and W. Haase (Berlin: de Gruyter, 1980), 1024—54; D. Fish wick, “The Development of Provincial Ruler Worship in the “Western Roman Empire,”
ANRW II.
16.2 (1978): 1201-53; id.,
The Imperial Cult in the Latin West: Studies in the Ruler Cult of the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire,
EROER 108/2 (Leiden: Brill, 1991); R. M. Novak,
Christianity and the Roman Empire: Background Texts
(Harrisburg: Trinity Press International, 2001), 267—72; P. A. Harland, “Imperial Cults Within Local Cultural Life: Associations in Roman Asia,”
ZAG
17 (2003): 85-107.

128
Friesen,
Imperial Cults,
25, 27.

129
Ibid., 36-38. So Tacitus,
Annals
4.15.

130
Ibid., 44-46.

131
Price,
Rituals and Power,
135. For an excellent map locating imperial temples in Asia Minor, see M. Wilson,
Charts on the Book of Revelation: Literary, Historical, and Theological Perspectives
(Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2007), 115.

132
Price,
Rituals and Power,
16, 29-31.

133
On the religious nature of the imperial cult, see H. W. Pleket, “An Aspect of the Emperor Cult: Imperial Mysteries,”
HTR
58 (1965): 331—47; F. Millar, “The Imperial Cult and the Persecutions,” in
Le Culte des Souverains dans L'Empire Romain
(Genève: Fondation Hardt, 1973), 145-75; Harland, “Imperial Cults Within Local Cultural Life,” 87-90, 93-103. For scholars marginalizing the religious nature of the imperial cult, see P. Harland, “Honours and Worship: Emperors, Imperial Cults and Associations at Ephesus,”
SR
25 (1996): 334, n. 4.

134
Harland, “Honours and Worship,” 328—29; S. J. Friesen,
Twice Neokoros: Ephesus, Asia and the Cult of the Flavian Imperial Family
(Leiden: Brill, 1993), 146. Against Price
(Rituals and Power,
233), who argued for a “clear distinction between human and divine honours” and contended that the emperor might have been slotted into the intermediate category of hero.

135
Price,
Rituals and Power,
170—206. Compare Friesen
(Imperial Cults,
50), who noted that archaeologists have discovered the remains of a colossal statue of either Domitian or Titus. Based on the size of the head, left forearm, and left big toe, this statue must have towered above worshippers.

136
S. J. Scherrer, “Signs and Wonders in the Imperial Cult: A New Look at a Roman Religious Institution in the Light of Rev 13:13-15,”
JBL
103 (1984): 605. So Suetonius,
Gaius,
52.

137
Millar, “Imperial Cult and the Persecutions,” 147—48.

138
See Klauck, “Sendschreiben nach Pergamon,” 157—71; D. A. deSilva, “The ‘Image of the Beast’ and the Christians in Asia Minor: Escalation of Sectarian Tension in Revelation 13,”
TrinJ
12 NS (1991): 185—208; J. W. van Henten, “Dragon Myth and Imperial Ideology in Revelation 12—13,”
SBL Seminar Papers
33 (1994): 496—515; Borgen, “Emperor Worship and Persecution,” 493—509; Giesen,
Studien zur Johannesapokalypse,
100—213; H. J. de Jonge, “The Apocalypse of John and the Imperial Cult,” in
KYKEON: Studies in Honour of H. S. Versnel,
ed. H. F. J. Horstmanshoff et al. (Leiden: Brill, 2002), 127—41; L. J. L. Peerbolte, “To Worship the Beast: The Revelation to John and the Imperial Cult in Asia Minor,” in
Zwischen den Reichen: Neues Testament und Römische Herrschaft,
TANZ 36, ed. K. Berger (Tübingen: A. Francke, 2002), 239—59; G. Biguzzi, “Ephesus, Its Artemision, Its Temple to the Flavian Emperors, and Idolatry in Revelation,”
NovT 40
(1998): 276-90; and S. J. Friesen, “Myth and Symbolic Resistance in Revelation 13,”
JBL
123 (2004): 287-311.

139
See deSilva, “Image of the Beast,” 197-201.

140
Dio Cassius,
Hist.
59.24.4; Philo,
Leg.
116; Aune,
Revelation 6-16,
741.

141
See Jones, “Christianity and the Roman Imperial Cult,”1024; Biguzzi, “Ephesus,” 277—79.

142
See
6:9;
18:24; 20:4. Against Millar (“Imperial Cult and the Persecutions,” 164—65), who contended that the imperial cult only played a minor role in the persecution of Christians. For a critique of Millar, see de Jonge, “Apocalypse of John and the Imperial Cult,” 127—41.

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