About This Book
A lawyer residing in Jerusalem writes to a Roman friend, recounting courtroom-like inquiries into a charismatic Jewish teacher called Christus, the impressions of soldiers and citizens, and debate over whether Judas Iscariot's act was criminal or defensible. He records eyewitness descriptions, the character of the movement's followers, the political and religious tensions that led to crucifixion, and personal reflections balancing legal reasoning, moral ambiguity, and emergent religious belief amid the city's sights and customs.
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