The words Tacitus, when speaking of the Christians persecuted by Nero, are remarkable, ‘vulgus Christianos appellabat,’ ‘the vulgar call them Christians.’
vulgus n sg or m sg (
genitive vulgī);
second declension
- (uncountable) the common people
- (uncountable) the public
- throng, crowd synonyms ▲Synonyms: multitūdō, turba
- gathering
Not at all remarkable that the common people called them Christian. (Methinks Mr. Richard Watson wasn't well versed in Latin.)
in either of which cases we should have met with it in the subsequent history of the Acts, and in the Apostolic Epistles
And it was. The author goes on to list them. Neither of the three instances give any indication that the Christians felt that such was derogatory to themselves.
Indeed, "the term
Christianoi from
1 Peter becomes the standard term in the
Early Church Fathers from
Ignatius and
Polycarp onwards."(
LINK-27). Why do Protestants always seem to ignore Catholic Church Fathers?
though the name was first given reproachfully, they gloried in it, as expressing their adherence to Christ, and they soon generally accepted it." Richard Watson, Watson’s Bible Dictionary (1832), p. 233.
Once again, someone, a certain Mr. Watson here, just makes the claim of reproachful-ness without himself providing sources. But note,
@backNforth even this guy says the believers "gloried in it." Meaning, it's been in use for centuries without the body of believers having such a tempest in a teapot about it.
Only occurs as used by others of them, not by Christians of themselves. ...Bullinger
Already answered. The Early Church Fathers used it.
Tacitus (A.D. 96) says (Annals 15, 44), ‘The vulgar call them Christians. ... Bullinger
Already answered. It would seem that Bullinger was bad at Latin too. (E.W., not Heinrich)
"This name (Christian) occurs but three times in the New Testament, and is never used by Christians of themselves," Thomas W. Doane, Bible Myths
Sure it was used by Christians of themselves. Used and embraced by the Early Church Fathers. So... just another Protestant who cuts off his nose to spite his face (meaning ignoring Catholic sources).
probably in reproach, Easton’s Bible Dictionary.
Again, a claim without a source, just "probably" ... and probably not...
"... those who are devoted to the god Serapis (I find), call themselves Bishops of Christ." The Emperor Adrian to Servianus, written A.D. 134.
Well it's obvious that
somebody was very confused here, and I wouldn't place much trust in such a confused person. It's just not wise. Serapis was a god from 300 BC or earlier. (You can go look it up!)
If you go to Zodhiates Word Studies, he tells you that when they were called Christians at Antioch, using the word ‘crematezo,’
Having met Mr. Zodhiates, I'm not sure if he was confused here, or you misunderstood what he was saying. "Crematezo" is a Verb that just means "to be called".
And once more, I provide a
LINK to the Liddell Scott Lexicon for 'crematezo'
III. in later writers, from
Plb. downwards, the Act.
χρηματίζω takes some special senses:
1. to take and bear a title or name, to be called or styled so and so,
2. generally, to be called,
So by the time of the first century, there was no association with an oracle for this verb at all.
Ya got any more?
Rhema