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The Tenth Region of the Night by Taylor R. Marshall
The Tenth Region of the Night by Taylor R. Marshall













The Tenth Region of the Night by Taylor R. Marshall

This should change how we understand both the historicity of Jesus but also impact of Jesus ministry. And this is why the High Priest and Sanhedrin wanted to kill Jesus so badly. To use an analogy, how many people living in Houston know of the local preacher Joel Osteen? All of them.

The Tenth Region of the Night by Taylor R. Marshall

This is why Peter on Pentecost AD 33 speaks to the crowd there about “Jesus” and they know who he is talking about. So it could be that as much as 25-50% of people living in the Holy Land had heard or witnessed Jesus Christ. That’s a low estimate since we know that Jesus was preaching and teaching at least annually in Jerusalem when most people were assembled there in the city for Passover. If you add in Christ’s travel, preaching, and teaching it’s not far off to estimate that 10% of the populace had seen or heard Jesus in person. 1 out 100 people had been fed miraculously by Jesus Christ. Assuming that they these two groups did not overlap, that means that Jesus personally fed about 1% of the population of the Holy Land (9,000 / 1,000,000). Jesus fed 5,000 and 4,000 people on two separate occasions. Here’s something else to consider about the impact of Jesus on the population: So when Jesus was walking around Galilee, Samaria, and Judea, he was engaging with a population less than half of Houston, Texas. Houston Texas has about 2.2 million people. For perspective, one million people is the population of the state of Rhode Island at 1 million people. Scholars suggest that about 1 million people lived in the Holy Land during the time of Jesus. I’ve spilled a lot of ink showing that Josephus cannot and should not be trusted with numbers or dates (and that’s why we should believe that Jesus was born on Dec 25 1 BC as I explain in this book). Josephus relates that 1.1 million Jews were killed in AD 70 with the destruction of the Temple.















The Tenth Region of the Night by Taylor R. Marshall