Each Christmas, I hear the story of Jesusā birth read publicly from the Gospel of Luke. And it often seems like the timing of Jesusā birth and the census under some guy named Quirinius gets read pretty quickly, almost like itās an unnecessary interjection no one really cares about. For most people, it probably is.
But hereās why I started to care about the Quirinius part: Skeptics often say that Luke must have messed up on the timing of the Christmas story. In what follows, Iāll explain one of the most common challenges to the historicity of the Bible. Iāll also share the other side of the story ā the one skeptical friends may not have considered.
But first, letās go to the primary source. Luke 2:1ā6 is ground zero for this conversation:
In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. (This was the first census that took place while Quirinius was governor of Syria.) And everyone went to their own town to register. So Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to Bethlehem the town of David, because he belonged to the house and line of David. He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him and was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born.
So why do skeptics insist that Lukeās account makes a historical error? Itās all wrapped up in when this census actually happened.
A Jewish historian by the name of Josephus wrote that Quirinius ruled in A.D. 6. But hereās the thing: Thatās nine whole years after King Herod died in 4 B.C. Since Matthew says Jesus was born about two years before King Herod died, Lukeās report seems to have a timing problem.
But the skepticās challenge is that this census really happened way too late to be the reason for why Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem. And so, they might claim, weāve got a glaring example of a clear historical error in the Bible.
Of course, itās also possible that it was actually Josephus who was wrong. Still, letās focus on Lukeās report. Does this automatically mean that Luke made a mistake in talking about the census and the timing of Jesusā birth? Not by a long shot.
Donāt forget that this whole thing was a government project! No disrespect to my friends who work in public service, but itās no secret that governments around the world tend to take forever to get stuff done ā even in the 21st century!
We know the Roman government was tallying up everyone who lived in the empire and that Caesar Augustus actually did three of these censuses around this time. So imagine this ancient Roman census as a massive project that took years from start to finish, from the time they got started until the government could actually use the data in the whole process of taxing people.
In an interview on Quiriniusā census, scholar Darrell Bock explains it like this:
āAugustus didnāt institute an empire-wide census, but he instituted a variety of censuses in specific locations moving from place to place as he gradually took the census of the empire. ... This census took place somewhere between 6 and 4 B.C. ā at least the beginning mechanizations of it ā but it wasnāt actually executed until we got to Quirinius. ... Heās the one who got the data, put it together, presented it for Rome and Rome actually began to make use of it for taxation under Quirinius. So this is a long process.ā
He suggests thinking about this whole endeavor like a modern freeway project:
āSometimes, it takes a while between the planning of the freeway and the actual building of the freeway and the completion of the freeway. ... This census became associated with Quirinius because heās the one who completed it, but wasnāt the one who was responsible for starting it.ā
He also says that āclassical historians respect Luke as a historian [in that] they use himā as a contemporary source and that āa careful look at the details of Acts show that, where we can check him, Luke is a credible historian.ā This is āthe rest of the storyā which skeptics donāt seem to engage with when they bring up this issue and challenge Lukeās credibility.
Rather than automatically throw out Lukeās report as historically inaccurate, it seems best to give him the benefit of the doubt on this one. By setting Jesusā birth in the context of world history, Luke shows that heās concerned about writing down what really happened. His mention of Quiriniusā census in the Christmas story doesnāt automatically mean that he made a mistake. Maybe Luke knew something we donāt.
In all this, whatās most important is the core of the Christmas story. And thatās the angelic message the shepherds heard that first Christmas: āGood news of great joy that will be for all the people. Today in the town of David, a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lordā (Luke 2:10ā11).
Mikel Del Rosario (ā99, M.A. ā03), a graduate of Biolaās masterās program in Christian apologetics, is a professor, speaker and author who trains Christians in defending the faith. This is an adapted version of an article that originally appeared on his website, .