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  1. The unnamed wife of Pontius Pilate appears only once in the Gospel of Matthew (27:19), where she intercedes with Pilate on Jesus' behalf. It is uncertain whether Pilate was actually married, although it is likely.

    • 27 October (Eastern Orthodox, Eastern Catholic), 25 June (Ethiopian Orthodox)
  2. Mar 8, 2021 · Learn about Claudia Procula, the wife of the Roman governor who tried and condemned Jesus. Discover how she intervened on Jesus's behalf, what happened to her after the crucifixion, and why her story matters for our faith.

  3. Learn about the wife of Pontius Pilate, a Roman governor who condemned Jesus to death in the gospel of Matthew. Find out how she sent a dream warning him, why she was high-born and wealthy, and how she was portrayed by a poet.

  4. Claudia Procula is the only name of Pontius Pilate's wife in the Bible, according to Matthew 27:19. She sent a message to her husband warning him not to sentence Jesus to death, but this is the only mention of her in the New Testament. The Bible also mentions her name in some apocryphal sources, such as the Gospel of Nicodemus and the Gospel of John. Learn more about her life, her dream, and her possible conversion.

  5. Dec 8, 2002 · A poem that imagines the wife of Pontius Pilate's encounter with Jesus during the crucifixion of the Galileans. She hears Jesus' words of judgment and mercy, and receives his promise of grace and hope.

  6. Jun 30, 2020 · While her name, Pilate’s wife, is muted in the Bible, she is known in Greco-Roman history as Procla or Claudia. Through the record of her disturbing dream (possibly a nightmare) we encounter a woman devoted to the pursuit of seeking justice for a Jewish rabbi known in her time as Jesus of Nazareth.

  7. The German Catholic novelist Gertrud von Le Fort's Die Frau des Pilatus portrays Pilate's wife as converting to Christianity after attempting to save Jesus and assuming Pilate's guilt for herself; Pilate executes her as well.

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