Answer: Burton L. Mack (Who Wrote the New Testament) says that a second-century focus on the apostles saw them imagined to have performed miracles as Jesus did, to have preached as he did and died as he did. Stories of their martyrdom were developed at this time and began to circulate. However, we do not really know how any of the twelve apostles died.
-----------------------The Book of Revelation is signed by 'John', who said that he was writing from the island of Patmos, and because of the coincidence of names has long been associated with the disciple John. However modern scholars say that the autohr could not really have been the author of John's Gospel, nor could he have been the disciple John. To distinguish him as a separate person, he now tends to be called John of Patmos, and there is no reason to believe that he was ever a prisoner.Becuae of the traditional association of Revelation with the disciple John, the early Christians developed a legend that got John on the island of Patmos, thereby 'proving' that he really was the author of Revelation. The belief developed that the Romans had boiled John in oil, but he miraculously survived this and other attempts to kill him. Although they were unable to harm John, the Romans were still somehow able to take him by force as a prisoner to Patmos. This is a wonderful legend, but has no historical basis. The otherwise unknown author, John of Patmos, was not the disciple John and was not a prisoner.
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1 ton of oil is called 1 ton of oil. Oil is usually measured in barrels which equal 42 gallons. So making some assumptions a ton of oil would be about 6 barrels or so.
You need to know the density of the oil.
When the Romans failed in their attempt to boil John in oil, he was exiled to the island of Patmos.
John the Apostle is traditionally believed to have survived being boiled in oil by Emperor Domitian, which could be why he is sometimes associated with healing burns or protection from burns. However, there is no definitive reason why he is specifically the patron saint of burns.
A person named John probably writed on the Patmos Island The Revelation (Apocalypse).Roman Catholic AnswerAccording to Tertullian's testimony, the Romans attempted to boil St. John alive in boiling oil, when he survived that unscathed, he was exiled to the island of Patmos under the emperor, Domitian. After Domitian's death, John returned to Ephesus. He died about the age of 100, but that was at Ephesus, he would have been younger when he was at Patmos. See the Catholic Encyclopedia article below:
St. John the Apostle is often associated with the miracle of raising a man from the dead, who was believed to have died from illness. Additionally, it is said that he was able to heal the sick and perform other acts of healing during his time as an apostle.
Yes, according to Christian tradition, John the Apostle was not harmed when he was thrown into a pot of boiling oil by the Roman authorities. Instead, he miraculously emerged unscathed.
AnswerThere is no record in the Bible of any miracle happening to the apostle John or being performed by him. However, an imaginative Christian tradition grew up around him in later centuries, in order to explain how John arrived in Patmos and therefore identify him as the author of Revelation. The popular tradition about John is that Emperor Domitian ordered him brought as a prisoner to Rome and thrown into a vat of boiling oil. John was unharmed by the boiling oil, and he was eventually exiled under guard in Patmos. An anomaly is that if John was immune to harm, as shown by his escape from the boiling oil, he could scarcely have been restrained by armed guards, who should also have been totally unable to harm him.
John the apostle, he was skinned and then boiled alive in burning oil.
30 gallons
Oh, dude, you're talking about the legend that says the apostle John was boiled in oil, right? Well, technically, there's no direct mention of that in the Bible, but it's a popular tradition passed down through the ages. So, like, if you're looking for some spicy Bible stories, that one might just be an urban legend.
Many writings from the early Church Fathers however testify that John, the beloved apostle of Jesus, indeed wrote Revelations and also was banned by the tyrant Domitian, who reigned after his brother Titus from 81 to 96 AD.After the death of Domitian in 96 AD John was able to leave Patmos.When Trajan, not long since, succeeded to the empire of the Romans, Ignatius, the disciple of John the apostle, a man in all respects of an apostolic character, governed the Church of the Antiochians with great care, having with difficulty escaped the former storms of the many persecutions under Domitian... Ignatius Martyrdom 1,1For when, on the tyrant's death, he returned to Ephesus from the isle ofPatmos, he went away, being invited, to the contiguous territories of the nations, here to appoint bishops, there to set in order whole Churches, there to ordain such as were marked out by the Spirit.Clemens Salvation Rich Man 42,1John left Patmos after the death of Domitian. Certainly the guards appointed by the tyrant were no longer interested in keeping him in exile, for after the death of Domitian the persecutions stopped for a short time.A: We do not know how or how often John left Patmos. In fact we do not even know who "John of Patmos" was, in spite of a later tradition that he might have been the apostle John, based on the coincidence of names. Patmos was a busy transit port and it would have been easy for John to catch any one of the many boats plying the route and stopping over at the Island of Patmos. It is for this very reason that Patmos would be one of the least likely places to incarcerate anyone.
A:We really know nothing about the apostle John after the time of the Resurrection, so we know nothing about how, where or when John died. Various pious traditions about John sprang up in the second century and later, including that he was boiled in oil, exiled to Patmos and so on, but these are mere fables. They tell us nothing about how John faced death.
A:Many imaginative Christian traditions sprang up in the second and third centuries about the travels and martyrdoms of all the disciples, including John, but there is no proof to support any of these traditions. The second-century Church Fathers decided that the person called John, who wrote the Book of Revelation, must have been the apostle John. They then had to find an explanation for John being on the island of Patmos, preferably one involving great heroism or a miracle. A popular tradition about John is that Emperor Domitian ordered him brought as a prisoner to Rome and thrown into a vat of boiling oil. John was unharmed by the boiling oil, and he was eventually exiled under guard in Patmos.Not only is the alleged episode of the boiling oil entirely implausible, the alleged exile proves it to be so. If John was immune to harm, as shown by his escape from the boiling oil, he could scarcely have been restrained by armed guards, who also would have been totally unable to harm him. So, not only was John never boiled in oil, the Bible does not even claim that he was.