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  1. 1 Answer. Sorted by: 5. The earliest extant reference to John being thrown in boiling oil from Tertullian, c. 200. His casual mention of the event suggests that it was a widely known story during his day, although it is hard to say by what amount of time the story predates Tertullian.

  2. In a stunning display of power, Emperor Domitian commands his soldiers to cast John, the beloved disciple, into a seething cauldron of boiling oil, depicted on the right. Astonishingly, John emerges from the scalding liquid unscathed, an extraordinary miracle that is symbolized by the ethereal presence of a dove, representing the Holy Spirit ...

  3. Sep 1, 2016 · Being plunged into boiling hot oil in front of a crowd of spectators at the Colosseum. The fires were set under the pot, the oil was boiling, and John was brought out. Guards picked him up and then forcibly plunged him into the scalding liquid. That’s when something amazing happened.

  4. Jan 21, 2022 · The most plausible theory of Johns death states that John was arrested in Ephesus and faced martyrdom when his enemies threw him in a huge basin of boiling oil. However, according to the tradition, John was miraculously delivered from death.

  5. Tertullian (On the Prescription of Heresies 36) tells of the Roman attempt to boil John alive in oil. The Acts of John, from the late second century, describes miracles in Ephesus and offers a testimony to the “spiritual” character of Jesus’ passion.

  6. May 8, 2024 · The theologian Tertullian reported that John was plunged into boiling oil but miraculously escaped unscathed. In the original apocryphal Acts of John, the apostle dies; however, later traditions assume that he ascended to heaven. Officially, the apostles grave is at Ephesus.

  7. John was allegedly banished by the Roman authorities to the Greek island of Patmos, where, according to tradition, he wrote the Book of Revelation. According to Tertullian (in The Prescription of Heretics) John was banished (presumably to Patmos) after being plunged into boiling oil in Rome and suffering nothing from it.

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