Fifteen bishops. Two hundred years. Zero surviving words.
In the mother church of Christianity—Jerusalem—there is a two-century black hole. Fifteen bishops ruled the holy city between 135 AD and 325 AD, yet they left behind no writings, no sermons, and no biographies. They are the "ghost bishops" of Jerusalem. But what if this absolute silence isn’t an accident of history? What if it’s the evidence of a cover-up?
In this explosive premiere of the Sleight of Hand, Sleight of Scripture series on Pre-Nicene Perspective, host Presbyter Darren Kelama reopens a 1,700-year cold case and uncovers a forensic smoking gun that rewrites the history of the early church.
We travel back to 135 AD. Emperor Hadrian has just crushed the Bar Kokhba revolt, banned all Jews from Jerusalem on pain of death, and rebuilt the city as a pagan colony. In this new Roman city, possessing the Torah or worshipping Yahweh is a capital crime. So, what kind of Christian community can survive in a city where the Old Testament is illegal?
Only one: A church whose Bible contains no Jewish text. A church whose God is not Yahweh. A church we now call Marcionite.
In this episode, we investigate:
How Hadrian's ban on Judaism structurally evicted Yahweh from Jerusalem and inadvertently created the first purely Christian episcopate.
The inevitable, history-altering meeting between Jerusalem’s first Gentile bishop, Marcus, and the shipmaster Marcion of Sinope.
The 200,000 sesterces sent to Rome—and why returning the fortune was the ultimate receipt of a rejected embassy.
🖋️ The documentary fraud: How Eusebius couldn't keep his forged bishop lists straight, and how Epiphanius’s suspicious "aphasia" exposed the cover-up. The heresiologists didn't just refute a rival theology; they silenced a succession. They forged new scriptures, erased the original bishops, and scrubbed the history of the holy city. But the palimpsest is legible, and the forensic scars remain.
Notes:
The Myth of the Jerusalem Continuity: Aelia Capitolina, the Marcionite Mission to Rome, and the Suppressed Apostolic Succession (AD 135–325) Author: A.W. Mitchell, Chancellor
https://www.journal.pre-nicene.org/Special-Issue-2026
TheVeryFirstBible.org
Eusebius, Historia ecclesiastica 4.5.1–4; 5.12.1–2 (trans. Paul L. Maier, Eusebius: The Church History [Grand Rapids: Kregel Academic, 2007]).
Galatians 2:4, The Very First Bible: The Evangelion and Apostolikon (Marcionite Church, 2020), 77.
Thessalonians 2:2, The Very First Bible, 185.
Marcionite Prologue to Romans, trans. F. C. Burkitt, “The Marcionite Prologues to the Letters of St. Paul,” in The Gospel History and Its Transmission (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1906), 355ff.
Galatians 1:6‑9; 2 Corinthians 11:13; Philippians 3:2, The Very First Bible, 75, 143, 229.
Cassius Dio, Historia Romana 69.12.1–2; Historia Augusta, Hadrian 14.2.
Marcionite Church
Eusebius, Hist. eccl. 4.6.4.
Epiphanius, Panarion 42.1.2 (trans. Frank Williams, The Panarion of Epiphanius of Salamis: Book I [2nd ed.; Leiden: Brill, 2009]); Tertullian, Adversus Marcionem 4.1 (trans. Ernest Evans, Tertullian: Adversus Marcionem [Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1972]).
Jason D. BeDuhn, The First New Testament: Marcion’s Scriptural Canon (Salem, OR: Polebridge Press, 2013), 28–33.
Pre-Nicene.org
