Geographic Realities and the African Connection in the New Testament
The thing is, we often read the Bible through a Eurocentric lens that completely ignores where these events actually happened. Israel sat at the literal crossroads of Asia, Europe, and Africa. Because of this proximity, the movement of people between the Levant and the Nile Delta—or further south into the Kingdom of Aksum and Cyrenaica—was as common as commuting between modern cities. People don't think about this enough, but the Roman Empire was a melting pot where skin color didn't carry the same systemic baggage it does today. Yet, the biblical text provides specific clues about the origins of those who followed Jesus. We see individuals explicitly labeled by their hometowns or nicknames that point directly to the African continent.
The Cyrenian Connection: Simon and the Cross
Take Simon of Cyrene. He appears in the Synoptic Gospels at the most pivotal moment of the narrative: the walk to Golgotha. Cyrene was a Greek city located in what is now Libya, which at the time had a massive, thriving Jewish population. But was he "black" in the sense we use the term today? Honestly, it’s unclear to some scholars, but the historical consensus leans toward him being an African Jew or a proselyte. This man was compelled to carry the cross of Christ, and the detail that his sons, Alexander and Rufus, were known to the early Roman church suggests his family became foundational to the movement. That changes everything when you realize the very first person to literally "take up the cross" and follow Jesus was an African visitor to Jerusalem.
The Case of Simeon Called Niger: Language as a Clue
Where it gets tricky is when we move from the Gospels into the Book of Acts. In Acts 13:1, we find a list of prophets and teachers in the church at Antioch, and the text mentions a man named Simeon called Niger. Now, "Niger" is a Latin term that literally means "black." It wasn't a surname; it was a descriptive epithet used to distinguish him from other Simeons in the community. If someone is called "The Black" in a Greek and Latin-speaking environment, it’s a pretty safe bet they had dark skin. But the issue remains that Western theology has often treated these descriptors as mere footnotes rather than central to the identity of the early church leaders. This man wasn't just a bystander; he was a leader laying hands on Paul and Barnabas to send them on their missionary journeys. And that’s a level of authority that usually gets glossed over in Sunday school lessons.
Lucius of Cyrene and the African Leadership Bloc
Right next to Simeon in that Antiochian list is Lucius of Cyrene. Here we have a second individual from North Africa holding a high-ranking position in one of the most influential churches of the first century. Which explains why some historians argue that the "black disciple" wasn't a solitary figure but part of an influential African bloc within the primitive church. It is fascinating to consider that the missionary impulse that eventually reached Europe was catalyzed, in part, by men from Libya and potentially Sub-Saharan regions. We are far from the idea of a segregated gospel; rather, the "black disciple" identity is spread across several men who were instrumental in the theological formation of the faith. These men were present at the Pentecost in 33 AD, where "visitors from Libya near Cyrene" are explicitly mentioned among the first converts.
Distinguishing the Ethiopian Eunuch from the Twelve
We need to be careful about conflating the Twelve Apostles with the broader circle of disciples. Many readers immediately think of the Ethiopian Eunuch when discussing black figures in the Bible, and for good reason. He was a high-ranking official, the treasurer of Queen Candace (Kandake) of the Meroitic Kingdom in modern-day Sudan. His encounter with Philip in Acts 8 is a masterpiece of theological inquiry, but he wasn't one of the original twelve. Does that make him less of a "disciple"? I don't think so. In fact, his conversion is often cited as the fulfillment of Psalm 68:31, which prophesied that "Cush will submit herself to God." His return to Africa marked the beginning of one of the oldest Christian traditions in the world, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church, which predates many European state churches by centuries.
The Discipleship of the Seventy-Two
In Luke 10, Jesus sends out seventy-two others (some manuscripts say seventy) to preach in every town he was about to visit. While we don't have a census-style breakdown of their ethnicities—and it would be anachronistic to expect one—the cultural environment suggests a high probability of North African participation. The Mediterranean world was a web of trade routes. You have to wonder: how many of those seventy-two returned home to cities like Alexandria or Cyrene long before the "official" missionary journeys began? As a result, the search for the black disciple leads us past the famous names and into the anonymous crowd of witnesses who saw the Resurrection and took that fire back to the African continent immediately.
Comparing Hebraic and African Identity in the First Century
When we compare the "black disciple" candidates to the traditional Hebraic Twelve, the lines get blurry in a way that actually supports the diversity of the group. The region of Cush and the land of Mizraim (Egypt) were deeply intertwined with Israelite history long before the New Testament was written. Zipporah was a Cushite; the "mixed multitude" that left Egypt during the Exodus almost certainly included dark-skinned North and East Africans. Hence, the idea that a disciple could be "black" wasn't a novelty to the first-century mind—it was a continuation of a multi-ethnic narrative that began with Abraham. The distinction we make today between "Middle Eastern" and "African" is a modern cartographic invention that would have made very little sense to Peter or John. In short, the presence of black disciples was not an anomaly to be explained away, but a standard feature of the world they inhabited.
The Problem of Historical Erasure in Art
The issue remains that for centuries, European art has standardized the appearance of the disciples to look like Renaissance Italians or Northern Europeans. This isn't just an aesthetic choice; it’s a form of historical revisionism that impacts how we perceive the "black disciple" today. When you look at the Coptic icons from Egypt or the ancient murals in Ethiopia, the disciples are depicted with brown skin and African features. This wasn't "inclusion" for the sake of modern sensibilities; it was an accurate reflection of their local reality and the historical memories of those communities. We've been trained to look for a "black disciple" as if they were a rare bird in a white forest, but the reality was likely a spectrum of olive, brown, and deep black tones across the entire group of Jesus’s followers.
