In the New Living Translation... Luke 3...
12 Even corrupt tax collectors came to be baptized and asked, "Teacher, what should we do?"
13 He replied, "Collect no more taxes than the government requires."
In the King James version....
John the Baptist is not recorded as speaking to tax collectors.
He did speak to the Pharisees and Sadducees (members of two Jewish sects) saying...
All sorts of persons came to John to be baptized, including harlots and tax collectors. (Matthew 21:32) In the autumn of 29 C.E., Jesus came to John to be baptized. John at first objected, knowing his own sinfulness and the righteousness of Jesus. But Jesus insisted. (Matthew 3:13; Mark 1:9; Luke 3:21)
The whiskey boys hurt the tax collectors all the time.
the king maybe
They were tax collectors and judges.
There were two tax collectors one was Matthew and the other was Zachaeus.
You need to specify where and when in history men attacked tax collectors if you want to make it possible to answer this question.
The Sons of Liberty tarred and feathered tax collectors as a form of protest against British taxation policies. This violent action was meant to intimidate tax collectors and discourage them from carrying out their duties.
because the colonist shot one of the tax collectors and everyone else got really scared of him so they shot they're business now there's a whole conflict between them. so yea....... basically that's it. don't ask anymore questions.
A tax collector in ancient Rome was an "exactor".
what is the name of the society of colonists that burned stamps and hung tax collectors in effigy
no
no