When the church was birthed Herod Agrippa was governor of Judea. He ruled by the gracious favor of the emperor Claudius but he never forgot that his position was as dependent on the favor of the Jews as it was on Caesar’s. So it was that, in an attempt to curry favor with his Jewish constituents, Herod began to persecute the church.
He jailed innocent men and women and children, confiscated their goods, seized their houses and lands, and wreaked havoc among the church in general. It was not an easy time to be a Christian, and it never was during those early centuries, yet, surprisingly the movement grew. People flocked to this strange and new religious sect because it offered a message of hope; no other religious ideology of the time assured people of life beyond the grave the way Christianity did and its entire ideology was based on a single fact, the resurrection of Jesus. Because Jesus has been raised from the dead everyone who accepted him and believed in him, could experience the same transformation. Despite the inferno of persecution that surrounded the movement, this single truth propelled it forward at breakneck speed.
The growth of the church, despite the continuous pressure heaped on it by external forces, enraged the Jews. To them, Christianity represented extinction and a shift of power. In their minds, the growth of Christianity, which seemed to be an extension of Judaism, threatened to destroy Judaism completely and shift its power base by appropriating most of its adherents. It seemed that thousands of years of tradition teetered on the brink of being expunged because of a dead Jew named Jesus who couldn’t be exterminated no matter how hard the Jewish leaders tried
Herod understood the dynamics of the situation; if he wanted to keep the Jews happy and in his corner, then he needed to destroy the church. With this in mind, he began targeting church leaders. The reasoning seemed simple enough; if you cut off the head the body will wither and die. Yet Herod didn't realize that the head of the church was not a man or even a dead Jew, it was God himself and Herod's sword could never extend that far.