Marcus Antonius Felix was the procurator of the Roman province of Iudaea between A.D. 52 and 58.
Secular history tells us he was a Greek, known for his cruelty and fond of bribes. His rule was
characterized by political unrest, which he put down ruthlessly. He married three times, his middle wife being
a Jewish divorcee named Drusilla who died two decades later in the famous first century eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
It would not be wildly out of line to suggest Felix’s
“rather accurate knowledge” of The Way was likely a direct consequence of this second marriage.














