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Capernaum
Jesus’
"own
city"
by Mark A. Chancey
Capernaum was a small Jewish fishing and agricultural
community on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee.
It was apparently a principal base of Jesus' operations,
with Matthew 9:1 going
so far as to call it Jesus’ "own city."
According to Mark 1:29, it
was the hometown of Jesus' disciples Simon, Andrew, James, and John.
It is the setting for well-known stories such as Jesus'
call of a tax collector to follow him (Mark 2:12-17), his preaching and exorcism in
a synagogue (Mark 1:21-28, Luke 4:31-37), the healing of Simon's
mother-in-law (Matthew 8:14-15, Mark 1:29-31, Luke 4:38-39) and the healing of a paralytic man (Matthew 9:1-8, Mark 2:1-12).
Perhaps the most famous story associated with Capernaum is
that of the Gentile centurion whose faith Jesus praises after healing his
servant (Matthew 8:5-13, Luke 7:1-10).
Various scholars explored and excavated portions
of the site in the late 1800s and early 1900s. In the late 1960s,
archaeologists associated with the Studium Biblical Franciscanum (Franciscan
Biblical School) in Jerusalem began more extensive work there, followed a
decade later by archaeologists associated with the Greek Orthodox Church.
The most famous discoveries are a limestone synagogue
constructed in the late fourth or early fifth century C.E. that can now be seen
in reconstructed form and an octagonal church built in the fifth century.
The church sits atop a first-century house that itself
underwent extensive renovation in the preceding centuries.
Aramaic, Greek, Latin, and Syriac graffiti demonstrate
that it was a site of pilgrimage already in the fourth century.
Because the fourth-century Christian pilgrim Egeria wrote
that she visited the house of Peter, many believe that ancient architectural
remains underneath the octagonal church are in fact the disciple's house.
Archaeological finds from the first century are more modest
but nonetheless extensive and important, consisting of basalt houses with
accompanying courtyards, streets, and various small objects.
Fragments from stone vessels attest to the village's
predominantly Jewish population, as only Jews in this region used such vessels,
believing them to be impervious to ritual impurity.
Today, Capernaum's well-preserved finds provide a popular
destination for pilgrims and tourists.
Have archaeologists discovered the synagogue where Jesus
taught?
Early twentieth-century excavators were convinced that
Capernaum's limestone synagogue was the one built by the centurion mentioned
in Matthew 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10.
Later scholars suggested on architectural grounds that the
synagogue actually dated to the second or third century C.E.
Today, most scholars date the building's construction to
the late fourth or fifth century C.E. on the basis of pottery evidence, coin finds,
and stylistic considerations.
Many scholars are intrigued by the possibility that the
limestone synagogue was built on top of an earlier synagogue that may go back
to the first century, pointing to remains of basalt walls and pavements
underneath the fifth-century building.
Because thorough excavation of
the basalt structures would require dismantling the limestone synagogue, it is
likely that this question will never be resolved with certainty.
Were Roman soldiers stationed at Capernaum in the time of
Jesus?
Some interpreters understandably
assume that the centurion mentioned in Matthew 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10 was
a Roman army officer.
However, while both gospels refer to the centurion as
Gentile, neither identifies him as a Roman, and it is unlikely that Capernaum
had a Roman garrison in
the early first century.
Galilee at the time belonged to the territory of Antipas,
a Herodian client-king
who served at the whim of the Romans but had some degree of autonomy.
It would have been unusual for the Romans to station
soldiers in the territory of a loyal client-king who faced no serious internal
or external threats.
Roman troops were apparently not permanently stationed in
Galilee until the second century C.E.
A famous milestone exhibited at modern Capernaum that
documents the construction of a road by Roman soldiers dates not to the time of
Jesus but to the reign of Emperor Hadrian (117-138 C.E.).
Because the armies of the Herodian kings included Gentiles
and were sometimes organized along Roman lines, it is likely that the tradition
underlying the gospels' story originally referred to an officer in the army of
Antipas.
Mark A. Chancey is professor of religious studies in Dedman College
of Humanities and Sciences at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. His
research interests range from the historical Jesus, archaeology and the Bible,
and the political and social history of Roman-period Palestine to church-state
issues and religion and contemporary public education. He is the author of two
books with Cambridge University Press, The Myth of a Gentile Galilee (2002)
and Greco-Roman Culture and the Galilee of Jesus (2005),
and is the coauthor of Alexander to Constantine:
Archaeology of the Land of the Bible (Yale University Press,
2012).
Capernaum was a small Jewish fishing and agricultural
community on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee that figures prominently
in the Gospels' depictions of Jesus.
Did you know…?
· Capernaum was a Jewish fishing and
agricultural village by the Sea of Galilee in the early centuries C.E.
· The name “Capernaum” comes from the Hebrew Kefar Nahum, the village of Nahum.
· Capernaum is the site of several of the
Gospels' stories about Jesus, and Matthew 9:1 refers
to it as "Jesus' own city."
· The extensively excavated site is now a
favorite destination for tourists and pilgrims.
· The impressive reconstructed limestone
synagogue visible today dates to the late fourth or fifth-century C.E.
· Some scholars believe that Capernaum's
fifth-century octagonal church marks the site of the house of Jesus' disciple
Peter.
· Although a miracle story (Matthew 8:5-13 and Luke 7:1-10)
mentions a Gentile "centurion," at Capernaum, the reference is
probably to an officer in the army of the Herodian client-king Antipas, not a
Roman soldier.
· In addition to the New Testament,
other ancient sources such as the writings of
the late-first century C.E. Jewish historian Josephus and
the rabbis refer to Capernaum.
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