{"id":10691,"date":"2023-12-29T13:48:07","date_gmt":"2023-12-29T13:48:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/?p=10691"},"modified":"2024-12-29T22:20:03","modified_gmt":"2024-12-29T22:20:03","slug":"what-language-did-jesus-speak","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/what-language-did-jesus-speak\/","title":{"rendered":"What Language Did Jesus Speak?  Greek? Aramaic? Hebrew? All of the Above?"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2 data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\" style=\"\">What Language Did Jesus Speak? Greek? Aramaic? Hebrew? All of The ABOVE?<\/h2>\n<p>    <span><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"\" data-id=\"9575\" data-init-width=\"450\" data-init-height=\"600\" title=\"Joshua Schachterle\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/Joshua-Schachterle-Bart-Ehrman-Author-1-1.png\" data-width=\"218\" style=\"aspect-ratio: auto 450 \/ 600;\" width=\"218\" height=\"290\" data-height=\"290\"><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"\">Written by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/author\/marko\/\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"outline: none;\" rel=\"noopener\"><\/a><a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/author\/joshua-schachterle\/\" style=\"outline: none;\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Joshua Schachterle, Ph.D<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Author | &nbsp;Professor | Scholar<\/p>\n<p>Author | &nbsp;Professor | BE Contributor<\/p>\n<p style=\"\">Verified! &nbsp;See our <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/editorial-guidelines\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"outline: none;\" rel=\"noopener\">editorial guidelines<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"\">Verified! &nbsp;See our <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/editorial-guidelines\" target=\"_blank\" style=\"outline: none;\" rel=\"noopener\">guidelines<\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"\"><em>Edited by <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/laura-robinson\/\" style=\"outline: none;\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Laura Robinson, Ph.D.<\/a><\/em><\/p>\n\nDate written: December 29th, 2023\n<p style=\"\">\nDate written: December 29th, 2023<\/p>\n<p style=\"\">Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily match my own. &#8211; Dr. Bart D. Ehrman<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Scholars continue to speculate about what language Jesus spoke. Was it Hebrew since he was Jewish? Was it Greek since that was the language of the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-wrote-the-gospels\/\"> Gospels<\/a>? Did he speak Latin since Palestine was part of the Roman Empire? In this article, I\u2019ll explore these questions and what historians have to say about them.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><span><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"What Language Did Jesus Speak - Greek - Aramaic - Hebrew - All of Them\" data-id=\"10708\" width=\"697\" data-init-width=\"1920\" height=\"290\" data-init-height=\"800\" title=\"What Language Did Jesus Speak - Greek - Aramaic - Hebrew - All of Them\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/What-Language-Did-Jesus-Speak-Greek-Aramaic-Hebrew-All-of-Them.png\" data-width=\"697\" style=\"aspect-ratio: auto 1920 \/ 800;\" data-height=\"290\"><\/span><\/p>\n<h2 data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\">What\u2019s in a Name?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Before we look at Jesus\u2019 language, let\u2019s look at his name for our first clue. Scholars are clear that his given name was Yeshua, an Aramaic name, although it was probably pronounced<a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=ocWmAg1iaYc\"> YAY-shu<\/a>. How did we get from \u201cYeshua\u201d to \u201cJesus\u201d?<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">The earliest Christian writings we have are the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/what-books-did-paul-write-in-the-bible-exploring-pauline-epistles\/\" style=\"outline: none;\"> letters of Paul<\/a>. Paul was a Jew but was born and raised outside of Palestine; he therefore spoke and wrote in Greek. Paul knew that Yeshua was Jesus\u2019 actual name but he had to write that name in Greek for his Greek-speaking audience. Unfortunately, there is no SH- sound in Greek so Paul had to improvise (or perhaps he had seen the name written in Greek before). He wrote the name as Iesous (pronounced \u201cYAY-soos\u201d), adding the S sound at the end which in Greek makes the name masculine.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">From Iesous, English translators eventually derived the name Jesus.<\/p>\n<h2>What Was the Main Spoken Language in Jesus\u2019 Region?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus was raised in a region called Galilee in Palestine in the first half of the 1st century. According to<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Handbook-Exegesis-Testament-Stanley-Porter\/dp\/0391041576#:~:text=A%20Handbook%20to%20the%20Exegesis,provide%20a%20useful%20methodological%20basis.\"> Stanley Porter<\/a>, <strong>the principal spoken language of Palestine at that time was a language called Aramaic<\/strong>. Hebrew and Aramaic were closely related but definitely distinct.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Aramaic was originally the language of a people called the Arameans who ruled parts of Mesopotamia. According to scholar<a href=\"https:\/\/brill.com\/display\/title\/25008?language=en\" style=\"outline: none;\"> Holger Gzella<\/a>, the language became more widespread when it was adopted by the Assyrian and then the Neo-Assyrian empires. By the time Jesus was born, Aramaic had been the language of Palestine for centuries.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Because of this, the vast majority of scholars agree that Jesus spoke almost exclusively in Aramaic<\/strong>, specifically in the Galilean dialect of Aramaic which would have been his native language.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Additionally, even though the New Testament is written entirely in Greek (more on that later), there are clues in it that point to Jesus\u2019 original spoken language being Aramaic. This indicates that even for Greek speakers, some memories of Jesus originally included Aramaic words and phrases.<\/p>\n<h2 data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\">Aramaic in the New Testament<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">The New Testament authors transliterate, or write in their own lettering system, a few key Aramaic phrases from memories of what Jesus said. Here are some examples:<\/p>\n<table data-rows=\"5\" data-cols=\"3\" style=\"\">\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th style=\"\">\n<p>Verse<\/p>\n<\/th>\n<th style=\"\">\n<p>Aramaic Phrase<\/p>\n<\/th>\n<th style=\"\">\n<p>Meaning<\/p>\n<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td data-th=\"Verse\" style=\"\">\n<p>Mark 5:41<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cTalitha koum\u201d:Jesus says this to the daughter of Jairus whom Jesus raises from the dead.<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Meaning\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cLittle girl, get up!\u201d<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td data-th=\"Verse\" style=\"\">\n<p>Mark 7:34<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cEphphatha\u201d:Jesus says this to a man who was deaf and mute as he heals him.<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Meaning\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cBe opened!\u201d<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td data-th=\"Verse\" style=\"\">\n<p>Mark 14:36<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cAbba\u201d:This is how Jesus addresses God during his agonizing prayer in the garden of Gethsemane.<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Meaning\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cFather\u201d<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td data-th=\"Verse\" style=\"\">\n<p>Matthew 5:22<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cRaca\u201d:In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus says not use this term to insult others.<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<td data-th=\"Meaning\" style=\"\">\n<p>\u201cFool, or Empty Head\u201d<\/p>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">There are more, but I think you get the gist. If even these Greek-speaking authors, writing decades after Jesus\u2019 death, preserve memories of Jesus\u2019 speech in Aramaic, Aramaic was certainly Jesus\u2019 primary spoken language.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Besides Jesus\u2019 own Aramaic name and the use of some Aramaic phrases in the Gospels, the names of some of his<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/12-disciples-of-jesus\/\"> disciples<\/a> are Aramaic as well.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/saint-peter\/\">Peter<\/a>, for example, is the Greek translation of the Aramaic \u201cCephas\u201d (pronounced KAY-fahs) which means \u201crock.\u201d Thomas is from the Aramaic \u201ctoma\u201d meaning \u201ctwin\u201d and Bartholomew comes from the Aramaic \u201cbar-T\u014dlmay\u201d which means \u201cplowman.\u201d<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">There are also place names given in Aramaic in the New Testament. The place where Judas Iscariot dies is called \u201cAkeldama\u201d, Aramaic for \u201cfield of blood.\u201d The garden where Jesus prays in agony before he is arrested is called \u201cGethsemane\u201d, Aramaic for \u201coil press\u201d because it was on the Mount of Olives.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Finally, what language did Jesus speak on the cross?<\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/jesus-on-the-cross\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The last words Jesus speaks on the cross<\/a>, according to the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-wrote-the-gospel-of-mark\/\" style=\"outline: none;\"> Gospel of Mark<\/a>, are an Aramaic version of a line from Psalms 22:1: \u201cEloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?\u201d meaning \u201cMy God, my God, why have you forsaken me?\u201d<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">The Psalm, like most of the Hebrew Bible, was written in Hebrew, but Mark\u2019s version remembers (or imagines) Jesus speaking the same line in his native Aramaic. The word \u201cEloi,\u201d for example, &nbsp;is the Aramaic version of \u201cGod.\u201d In fact, this is probably what Jesus called God in prayer when he wasn\u2019t addressing him with the Aramaic \u201cAbba\u201d, or \u201cFather\u201d.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">FREE COURSE!<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">Raw, honest, and enlightening. Bart&#8217;s story of why he deconverted from the Christian faith.<\/p>\n<p>__CONFIG_colors_palette__{&#8220;active_palette&#8221;:0,&#8221;config&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;name&#8221;:&#8221;Main Accent&#8221;,&#8221;parent&#8221;:-1}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]},&#8221;palettes&#8221;:[{&#8220;name&#8221;:&#8221;Default&#8221;,&#8221;value&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;val&#8221;:&#8221;rgb(255, 133, 34)&#8221;}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]},&#8221;original&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;val&#8221;:&#8221;rgb(19, 114, 211)&#8221;,&#8221;hsl&#8221;:{&#8220;h&#8221;:210,&#8221;s&#8221;:0.83,&#8221;l&#8221;:0.45,&#8221;a&#8221;:1}}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]}}]}__CONFIG_colors_palette__ <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/why-i-am-not-a-christian-how-leaving-the-faith-led-to-life-of-more-meaning-and-purpose\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span>    <\/span> <span><span style=\"\"><strong>GET FREE ACCESS!<\/strong><\/span><\/span> <\/a> <\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>Over 6,000 enrolled!<\/em><\/p>\n<h2 data-fontsize=\"30\" data-lineheight=\"42px\">Did Jesus Speak Hebrew?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Angel-S%C3%A1enz-Badillos\/e\/B001IU2UJA\/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1\">Angel Saenz-Badillos<\/a> notes that Hebrew stopped being an ordinary spoken language in Palestine as early as the 5th century BCE, generally replaced by Aramaic. However, Hebrew had certainly not disappeared entirely. First and foremost, Hebrew was the language of the Jewish religion.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">All the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/books-of-the-bible\" style=\"outline: none;\">books in the Hebrew Bible<\/a> were written entirely in Hebrew with two exceptions: the books of Ezra and Daniel are partially written in Hebrew and partially in Aramaic.&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Ezra was written around 400 BCE, under the influence of the Persians who spoke Aramaic and allowed the Israelites to rebuild Jerusalem after their exile in Babylon. This was the beginning of Aramaic becoming the spoken language in Palestine.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Daniel was written about 164 BCE, only about 160 years before the birth of Jesus. The fact that it was partially written in Aramaic offers support that Aramaic was already becoming the more common language while Hebrew was generally used for religious purposes.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">However, it was very important for those who were literate \u2013 scholars and scribes, for example \u2013 to know the Hebrew language well. Even those Jews who were illiterate \u2013 probably 90% of them in Jesus\u2019 time \u2013 had to understand some Hebrew to participate in ritual worship and to understand the Scriptures when they were read in a synagogue or the Jerusalem Temple.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">So, did Jesus speak Hebrew? &nbsp;Most scholars agree that while he didn\u2019t converse in it from day to day, he could certainly understand the Scriptures in Hebrew and may even have cited them in Hebrew when he preached.<strong> <\/strong><\/p>\n<h2 data-fontsize=\"30\" data-lineheight=\"42px\">Did Jesus Speak Greek?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">If Jesus and his disciples were all Aramaic-speaking Jews living in Palestine, why is the entire New Testament written in Greek? Where did the Greek come from?<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">You may have heard of Alexander the Great, a king from the Greek kingdom known as Macedon, or Macedonia. In the 330s BCE, Alexander started a massive conquest that would include all of Greece, Persia (modern-day Iran), Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), the Mediterranean coast, Palestine, Egypt, and even northern India.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">&nbsp;One of the effects of this massive conquest was that Greek became the lingua franca in all those conquered regions. This means it was the language of trade and any other situation where people from different regions didn\u2019t share native languages. Eventually, Jews outside Palestine, like the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-was-paul-in-the-bible\/\"> Apostle Paul<\/a>, for example, often learned Greek as their first language.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">This was the case with the New Testament authors. Most, if not all of them, were diaspora Jews, observing the Jewish religion in places like Asia Minor and Egypt. Greek was so common in Alexander\u2019s empire, which later became the Roman Empire, that some scholars have surmised that Jesus would have learned and spoken at least some Greek.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/ehrmanblog.org\/did-jesus-speak-greek-for-members\/\">Bart Ehrman<\/a> disagrees with this (and so do I). This is how Bart puts it:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>In Nazareth Jesus would have had zero reason to learn Greek, and probably no way to learn Greek. Rural Galilee was completely Jewish (culturally) and thoroughly Aramaic (linguistically). Even when Jesus was an adult, there is no reference to him visiting a major city (until he goes to Jerusalem at the end of his life), or speaking Greek, or knowing Greek. He was a rural Jew in the Jewish hinterlands of Galilee. He almost certainly could not speak Greek.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>While it is not impossible that Jesus might have learned a few Greek phrases, even that is unlikely.<\/p>\n<p><span><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Jesus\u2019 native language\" data-id=\"10707\" width=\"697\" data-init-width=\"1920\" height=\"290\" data-init-height=\"800\" title=\"Jesus\u2019 native language\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/Jesus-native-language.png\" data-width=\"697\" style=\"aspect-ratio: auto 1920 \/ 800;\" data-height=\"290\"><\/span><\/p>\n<h2>Did Jesus Speak Latin?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">In 2004, Mel Gibson made a movie called The Passion of the Christ, which focused principally on a lot of invented and extra-gory details not present in the Gospel accounts of Jesus\u2019 crucifixion. However, much of the film had Jesus speaking to his disciples in Aramaic, which was historically accurate.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">But then, in the scene when he was brought before Pontius Pilate, Jesus suddenly spoke perfect Latin. The assumption, I suppose, was that since the official language of the Roman Empire was Latin and Palestine was part of the Roman Empire, Jesus had to speak Latin to converse with Pilate. Not so fast.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/ehrmanblog.org\/the-gospel-according-to-mel-gibson\/\">Bart Ehrman<\/a> has a few choice words about this:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Some scholars have suggested that Jesus knew a smattering of Latin given the Roman presence in the land; but that has been shown to be almost certainly false. There were no Romans present in Jesus\u2019 town of Nazareth, and prior to his arrival in Jerusalem the last week of his life, he probably never encountered a Roman.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus almost certainly did not speak Latin. If indeed the scene between Jesus and Pilate actually happened, Pilate would certainly have had an Aramaic translator present.<\/p>\n<h2>Conclusion: What Was Jesus\u2019 Everyday Language?<\/h2>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus lived in 1st-century Palestine where Hebrew had long since ceased to be a spoken language. Instead, people in Palestine spoke Aramaic, a language closely related to Hebrew but still separate.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">One of the reasons we know this is that although the New Testament was written entirely in Greek, many of the memories of Jesus include words preserved in Aramaic. These include words he spoke when he was healing and preaching.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">There are also Aramaic names in the Gospels, principally the names of Jesus\u2019 disciples, as well as Aramaic place names.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Finally, the last words of Jesus on the cross are preserved by Mark, our earliest Gospel, in Aramaic, even though they are quoting the Hebrew Bible. <strong>Aramaic was the language of Jesus.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">While it\u2019s not impossible that Jesus knew a few words in Greek, even that is improbable. Jesus was from a small, rural town in Galilee in which everyone spoke Aramaic. He had no reason and probably no way to learn Greek.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">While Jesus didn\u2019t speak Hebrew as a conversational language, he certainly understood it when it was read out loud in the Scriptures. Those who knew Hebrew best were elite scribes and scholars, neither of which describes the historical Jesus.<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Finally, despite Mel Gibson\u2019s portrayal of Jesus speaking Latin, there is almost no chance that he spoke it. Although the Roman Empire controlled Galilee, there is no evidence that Roman soldiers ever went there (Nazareth is entirely absent from most Roman maps of Palestine).<\/p>\n<p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus did not speak Latin. Sorry, Mel.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">FREE COURSE!<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">WHY I AM NOT A CHRISTIAN<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">Raw, honest, and enlightening. Bart&#8217;s story of why he deconverted from the Christian faith.<\/p>\n<p>__CONFIG_colors_palette__{&#8220;active_palette&#8221;:0,&#8221;config&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;name&#8221;:&#8221;Main Accent&#8221;,&#8221;parent&#8221;:-1}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]},&#8221;palettes&#8221;:[{&#8220;name&#8221;:&#8221;Default&#8221;,&#8221;value&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;val&#8221;:&#8221;rgb(255, 133, 34)&#8221;}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]},&#8221;original&#8221;:{&#8220;colors&#8221;:{&#8220;10c55&#8221;:{&#8220;val&#8221;:&#8221;rgb(19, 114, 211)&#8221;,&#8221;hsl&#8221;:{&#8220;h&#8221;:210,&#8221;s&#8221;:0.83,&#8221;l&#8221;:0.45,&#8221;a&#8221;:1}}},&#8221;gradients&#8221;:[]}}]}__CONFIG_colors_palette__ <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/why-i-am-not-a-christian-how-leaving-the-faith-led-to-life-of-more-meaning-and-purpose\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><span>    <\/span> <span><span style=\"\"><strong>GET FREE ACCESS!<\/strong><\/span><\/span> <\/a> <\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><em>Over 6,000 enrolled!<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>What Language Did Jesus Speak? Greek? Aramaic? Hebrew? All of The ABOVE? Written by Joshua Schachterle, Ph.D Author | &nbsp;Professor | Scholar Author | &nbsp;Professor | BE Contributor Verified! &nbsp;See our editorial guidelines Verified! &nbsp;See our guidelines Edited by Laura Robinson, Ph.D. Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article belong to the author [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":10,"featured_media":10708,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":"","tve_updated_post":"<div class=\"tcb-clear\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbc55\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv-button thrv-button-v2 tcb-local-vars-root\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbca8\" style=\"\">\n\t<div class=\"thrive-colors-palette-config\" style=\"display: none !important\">__CONFIG_colors_palette__{\"active_palette\":0,\"config\":{\"colors\":{\"62516\":{\"name\":\"Main Accent\",\"parent\":-1}},\"gradients\":[]},\"palettes\":[{\"name\":\"Default Palette\",\"value\":{\"colors\":{\"62516\":{\"val\":\"var(--tcb-skin-color-0)\"}},\"gradients\":[]}}]}__CONFIG_colors_palette__<\/div>\n\t<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/category\/historical-jesus\/\" class=\"tcb-button-link tcb-plain-text\" style=\"\" target=\"_blank\">\n\t\t<span class=\"tcb-button-texts\"><span class=\"tcb-button-text thrv-inline-text\" style=\"\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbcb7\">Historical Jesus<\/span><\/span>\n\t<\/a>\n<\/div><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" id=\"article-title\"><h2 class=\"fusion-responsive-typography-calculated\" data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbcc5\" style=\"\">What Language Did Jesus Speak? Greek? Aramaic? Hebrew? All of The ABOVE?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_symbol thrive-shortcode thrv_symbol_15449\" data-shortcode=\"thrive_symbol\" data-id=\"15449\" data-selector=\".thrv_symbol_15449\"><div class=\"thrive-shortcode-config\" style=\"display: none !important\">__CONFIG_post_symbol__{\"id\":\"15449\"}__CONFIG_post_symbol__<\/div><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p style=\"\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbe09\">Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily match my own. - Dr. Bart D. Ehrman<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18a6b64572c\" style=\"\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\">Scholars continue to speculate about what language Jesus spoke. Was it Hebrew since he was Jewish? Was it Greek since that was the language of the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-wrote-the-gospels\/\"> Gospels<\/a>? Did he speak Latin since Palestine was part of the Roman Empire? In this article, I\u2019ll explore these questions and what historians have to say about them.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><strong><em> <\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper tve_image_caption\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbe15\" data-type=\"\" style=\"\"><span class=\"tve_image_frame\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"tve_image tcb-moved-image wp-image-10708\" alt=\"What Language Did Jesus Speak - Greek - Aramaic - Hebrew - All of Them\" data-id=\"10708\" width=\"697\" data-init-width=\"1920\" height=\"290\" data-init-height=\"800\" title=\"What Language Did Jesus Speak - Greek - Aramaic - Hebrew - All of Them\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/What-Language-Did-Jesus-Speak-Greek-Aramaic-Hebrew-All-of-Them.png\" data-width=\"697\" style=\"aspect-ratio: auto 1920 \/ 800;\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbe24\" data-height=\"290\"><\/span><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"fusion-responsive-typography-calculated\" data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\">What\u2019s in a Name?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p dir=\"ltr\">Before we look at Jesus\u2019 language, let\u2019s look at his name for our first clue. Scholars are clear that his given name was Yeshua, an Aramaic name, although it was probably pronounced<a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=ocWmAg1iaYc\"> YAY-shu<\/a>. How did we get from \u201cYeshua\u201d to \u201cJesus\u201d?<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">The earliest Christian writings we have are the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/what-books-did-paul-write-in-the-bible-exploring-pauline-epistles\/\" class=\"\" style=\"outline: none;\"> letters of Paul<\/a>. Paul was a Jew but was born and raised outside of Palestine; he therefore spoke and wrote in Greek. Paul knew that Yeshua was Jesus\u2019 actual name but he had to write that name in Greek for his Greek-speaking audience. Unfortunately, there is no SH- sound in Greek so Paul had to improvise (or perhaps he had seen the name written in Greek before). He wrote the name as Iesous (pronounced \u201cYAY-soos\u201d), adding the S sound at the end which in Greek makes the name masculine.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">From Iesous, English translators eventually derived the name Jesus.<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"\">What Was the Main Spoken Language in Jesus\u2019 Region?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus was raised in a region called Galilee in Palestine in the first half of the 1st century. According to<a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Handbook-Exegesis-Testament-Stanley-Porter\/dp\/0391041576#:~:text=A%20Handbook%20to%20the%20Exegesis,provide%20a%20useful%20methodological%20basis.\"> Stanley Porter<\/a>, <strong>the principal spoken language of Palestine at that time was a language called Aramaic<\/strong>. Hebrew and Aramaic were closely related but definitely distinct.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Aramaic was originally the language of a people called the Arameans who ruled parts of Mesopotamia. According to scholar<a href=\"https:\/\/brill.com\/display\/title\/25008?language=en\" class=\"\" style=\"outline: none;\"> Holger Gzella<\/a>, the language became more widespread when it was adopted by the Assyrian and then the Neo-Assyrian empires. By the time Jesus was born, Aramaic had been the language of Palestine for centuries.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Because of this, the vast majority of scholars agree that Jesus spoke almost exclusively in Aramaic<\/strong>, specifically in the Galilean dialect of Aramaic which would have been his native language.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Additionally, even though the New Testament is written entirely in Greek (more on that later), there are clues in it that point to Jesus\u2019 original spoken language being Aramaic. This indicates that even for Greek speakers, some memories of Jesus originally included Aramaic words and phrases.<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"fusion-responsive-typography-calculated\" data-fontsize=\"42\" data-lineheight=\"58.8px\">Aramaic in the New Testament<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\">The New Testament authors transliterate, or write in their own lettering system, a few key Aramaic phrases from memories of what Jesus said. Here are some examples:<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_table tcb-fixed tcb-mobile-table\" data-ct-name=\"Simple 01\" data-ct=\"table-37694\" data-element-name=\"Table\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1682\" data-form-settings=\"__TCB_FORM__{&quot;form_identifier&quot;:&quot;who-wrote-the-bible-form-fp2prg&quot;}__TCB_FORM__\" style=\"\"><table data-rows=\"5\" data-cols=\"3\" class=\"tve_table tcb-fixed tve_table_flat\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1681\" style=\"\"><thead data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1683\"><tr class=\"tve_table_row\"><th class=\"tve_table_cell\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc4b\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1687\">Verse<\/p><\/div><\/th><th class=\"tve_table_cell\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1688\">Aramaic Phrase<\/p><\/div><\/th><th class=\"tve_table_cell\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1689\">Meaning<\/p><\/div><\/th><\/tr><\/thead><tbody data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1685\"><tr class=\"tve_table_row\"><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Verse\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1691\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">Mark 5:41<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1695\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cTalitha koum\u201d:<br>Jesus says this to the daughter of Jairus whom Jesus raises from the dead.<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Meaning\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1699\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cLittle girl, get up!\u201d<\/p><\/div><\/td><\/tr><tr class=\"tve_table_row\"><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Verse\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1692\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">Mark 7:34<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1696\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cEphphatha\u201d:<br>Jesus says this to a man who was deaf and mute as he heals him.<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Meaning\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb169a\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cBe opened!\u201d<\/p><\/div><\/td><\/tr><tr class=\"tve_table_row\"><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Verse\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1693\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">Mark 14:36<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb1697\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cAbba\u201d:<br>This is how Jesus addresses God during his agonizing prayer in the garden of Gethsemane.<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Meaning\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb169c\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cFather\u201d<\/p><\/div><\/td><\/tr><tr class=\"tve_table_row\"><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Verse\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb169e\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">Matthew 5:22<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Aramaic Phrase\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb169f\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cRaca\u201d:<br>In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus says not use this term to insult others.<\/p><\/div><\/td><td class=\"tve_table_cell\" data-th=\"Meaning\" data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb16a0\" style=\"\"><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\" data-css=\"tve-u-18b4ecfdc53\"><p data-css=\"tve-u-18cb1eb168a\">\u201cFool, or Empty Head\u201d<\/p><\/div><\/td><\/tr><\/tbody><\/table><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\">There are more, but I think you get the gist. If even these Greek-speaking authors, writing decades after Jesus\u2019 death, preserve memories of Jesus\u2019 speech in Aramaic, Aramaic was certainly Jesus\u2019 primary spoken language.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Besides Jesus\u2019 own Aramaic name and the use of some Aramaic phrases in the Gospels, the names of some of his<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/12-disciples-of-jesus\/\"> disciples<\/a> are Aramaic as well.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/saint-peter\/\">Peter<\/a>, for example, is the Greek translation of the Aramaic \u201cCephas\u201d (pronounced KAY-fahs) which means \u201crock.\u201d Thomas is from the Aramaic \u201ctoma\u201d meaning \u201ctwin\u201d and Bartholomew comes from the Aramaic \u201cbar-T\u014dlmay\u201d which means \u201cplowman.\u201d<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">There are also place names given in Aramaic in the New Testament. The place where Judas Iscariot dies is called \u201cAkeldama\u201d, Aramaic for \u201cfield of blood.\u201d The garden where Jesus prays in agony before he is arrested is called \u201cGethsemane\u201d, Aramaic for \u201coil press\u201d because it was on the Mount of Olives.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><strong>Finally, what language did Jesus speak on the cross?<\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/jesus-on-the-cross\/\" target=\"_blank\">The last words Jesus speaks on the cross<\/a>, according to the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-wrote-the-gospel-of-mark\/\" class=\"\" style=\"outline: none;\"> Gospel of Mark<\/a>, are an Aramaic version of a line from Psalms 22:1: \u201cEloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?\u201d meaning \u201cMy God, my God, why have you forsaken me?\u201d<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">The Psalm, like most of the Hebrew Bible, was written in Hebrew, but Mark\u2019s version remembers (or imagines) Jesus speaking the same line in his native Aramaic. The word \u201cEloi,\u201d for example, &nbsp;is the Aramaic version of \u201cGod.\u201d In fact, this is probably what Jesus called God in prayer when he wasn\u2019t addressing him with the Aramaic \u201cAbba\u201d, or \u201cFather\u201d.<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_symbol thrive-shortcode thrv_symbol_4835\" data-shortcode=\"thrive_symbol\" data-id=\"4835\" data-selector=\".thrv_symbol_4835\"><div class=\"thrive-shortcode-config\" style=\"display: none !important\">__CONFIG_post_symbol__{\"id\":\"4835\"}__CONFIG_post_symbol__<\/div><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"fusion-responsive-typography-calculated\" data-fontsize=\"30\" data-lineheight=\"42px\">Did Jesus Speak Hebrew?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Angel-S%C3%A1enz-Badillos\/e\/B001IU2UJA\/ref=dp_byline_cont_book_1\">Angel Saenz-Badillos<\/a> notes that Hebrew stopped being an ordinary spoken language in Palestine as early as the 5th century BCE, generally replaced by Aramaic. However, Hebrew had certainly not disappeared entirely. First and foremost, Hebrew was the language of the Jewish religion.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">All the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/books-of-the-bible\" class=\"\" style=\"outline: none;\">books in the Hebrew Bible<\/a> were written entirely in Hebrew with two exceptions: the books of Ezra and Daniel are partially written in Hebrew and partially in Aramaic.&nbsp;<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Ezra was written around 400 BCE, under the influence of the Persians who spoke Aramaic and allowed the Israelites to rebuild Jerusalem after their exile in Babylon. This was the beginning of Aramaic becoming the spoken language in Palestine.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Daniel was written about 164 BCE, only about 160 years before the birth of Jesus. The fact that it was partially written in Aramaic offers support that Aramaic was already becoming the more common language while Hebrew was generally used for religious purposes.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">However, it was very important for those who were literate \u2013 scholars and scribes, for example \u2013 to know the Hebrew language well. Even those Jews who were illiterate \u2013 probably 90% of them in Jesus\u2019 time \u2013 had to understand some Hebrew to participate in ritual worship and to understand the Scriptures when they were read in a synagogue or the Jerusalem Temple.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">So, did Jesus speak Hebrew? &nbsp;Most scholars agree that while he didn\u2019t converse in it from day to day, he could certainly understand the Scriptures in Hebrew and may even have cited them in Hebrew when he preached.<strong> <\/strong><\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"fusion-responsive-typography-calculated\" data-fontsize=\"30\" data-lineheight=\"42px\">Did Jesus Speak Greek?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\">\t<p dir=\"ltr\">If Jesus and his disciples were all Aramaic-speaking Jews living in Palestine, why is the entire New Testament written in Greek? Where did the Greek come from?<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">You may have heard of Alexander the Great, a king from the Greek kingdom known as Macedon, or Macedonia. In the 330s BCE, Alexander started a massive conquest that would include all of Greece, Persia (modern-day Iran), Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), the Mediterranean coast, Palestine, Egypt, and even northern India.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">&nbsp;One of the effects of this massive conquest was that Greek became the lingua franca in all those conquered regions. This means it was the language of trade and any other situation where people from different regions didn\u2019t share native languages. Eventually, Jews outside Palestine, like the<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/who-was-paul-in-the-bible\/\"> Apostle Paul<\/a>, for example, often learned Greek as their first language.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">This was the case with the New Testament authors. Most, if not all of them, were diaspora Jews, observing the Jewish religion in places like Asia Minor and Egypt. Greek was so common in Alexander\u2019s empire, which later became the Roman Empire, that some scholars have surmised that Jesus would have learned and spoken at least some Greek.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/ehrmanblog.org\/did-jesus-speak-greek-for-members\/\">Bart Ehrman<\/a> disagrees with this (and so do I). This is how Bart puts it:<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><blockquote class=\"\">In Nazareth Jesus would have had zero reason to learn Greek, and probably no way to learn Greek. Rural Galilee was completely Jewish (culturally) and thoroughly Aramaic (linguistically). Even when Jesus was an adult, there is no reference to him visiting a major city (until he goes to Jerusalem at the end of his life), or speaking Greek, or knowing Greek. He was a rural Jew in the Jewish hinterlands of Galilee. He almost certainly could not speak Greek.<\/blockquote><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p>While it is not impossible that Jesus might have learned a few Greek phrases, even that is unlikely.<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper tve_image_caption\" data-css=\"tve-u-64f8ac420dbf01\" data-type=\"\" style=\"\"><span class=\"tve_image_frame\"><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"tve_image tcb-moved-image wp-image-10707\" alt=\"Jesus\u2019 native language\" data-id=\"10707\" width=\"697\" data-init-width=\"1920\" height=\"290\" data-init-height=\"800\" title=\"Jesus\u2019 native language\" loading=\"lazy\" src=\"https:\/\/www.bartehrman.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/Jesus-native-language.png\" data-width=\"697\" style=\"aspect-ratio: auto 1920 \/ 800;\" data-css=\"tve-u-18c979af560\" data-height=\"290\"><\/span><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"\">Did Jesus Speak Latin?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p dir=\"ltr\">In 2004, Mel Gibson made a movie called The Passion of the Christ, which focused principally on a lot of invented and extra-gory details not present in the Gospel accounts of Jesus\u2019 crucifixion. However, much of the film had Jesus speaking to his disciples in Aramaic, which was historically accurate.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">But then, in the scene when he was brought before Pontius Pilate, Jesus suddenly spoke perfect Latin. The assumption, I suppose, was that since the official language of the Roman Empire was Latin and Palestine was part of the Roman Empire, Jesus had to speak Latin to converse with Pilate. Not so fast.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\"><a href=\"https:\/\/ehrmanblog.org\/the-gospel-according-to-mel-gibson\/\">Bart Ehrman<\/a> has a few choice words about this:<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><blockquote class=\"\">Some scholars have suggested that Jesus knew a smattering of Latin given the Roman presence in the land; but that has been shown to be almost certainly false. There were no Romans present in Jesus\u2019 town of Nazareth, and prior to his arrival in Jerusalem the last week of his life, he probably never encountered a Roman.<\/blockquote><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus almost certainly did not speak Latin. If indeed the scene between Jesus and Pilate actually happened, Pilate would certainly have had an Aramaic translator present.<\/p><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><h2 class=\"\">Conclusion: What Was Jesus\u2019 Everyday Language?<\/h2><\/div><div class=\"thrv_wrapper thrv_text_element\"><p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus lived in 1st-century Palestine where Hebrew had long since ceased to be a spoken language. Instead, people in Palestine spoke Aramaic, a language closely related to Hebrew but still separate.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">One of the reasons we know this is that although the New Testament was written entirely in Greek, many of the memories of Jesus include words preserved in Aramaic. These include words he spoke when he was healing and preaching.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">There are also Aramaic names in the Gospels, principally the names of Jesus\u2019 disciples, as well as Aramaic place names.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Finally, the last words of Jesus on the cross are preserved by Mark, our earliest Gospel, in Aramaic, even though they are quoting the Hebrew Bible. <strong>Aramaic was the language of Jesus.<\/strong><\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">While it\u2019s not impossible that Jesus knew a few words in Greek, even that is improbable. Jesus was from a small, rural town in Galilee in which everyone spoke Aramaic. He had no reason and probably no way to learn Greek.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">While Jesus didn\u2019t speak Hebrew as a conversational language, he certainly understood it when it was read out loud in the Scriptures. Those who knew Hebrew best were elite scribes and scholars, neither of which describes the historical Jesus.<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Finally, despite Mel Gibson\u2019s portrayal of Jesus speaking Latin, there is almost no chance that he spoke it. Although the Roman Empire controlled Galilee, there is no evidence that Roman soldiers ever went there (Nazareth is entirely absent from most Roman maps of Palestine).<\/p><p dir=\"ltr\">Jesus did not speak Latin. 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