Posted on 03/04/2007 7:42:00 AM PST by MadIvan
It is the greatest newspaper story ever told, and it was told again last week. In New York the Oscar-winning film-maker James Cameron pulled back a curtain to reveal two cream-coloured limestone coffins, flown in from Jerusalem. One of them, he said, had once held the recently crucified body of Jesus of Nazareth. Another there are 10 in the set had held that of Mary Magdalene.
It doesnt get bigger than this, he said, and then claimed it did. He had evidence that Jesus and Mary Magdalene had married and that another coffin or ossuary had contained a son, Judah.
It was a scene-stealing performance from the man who swept the Oscars with Titanic in 1998. Indeed, it could hardly have been more dramatic if Cameron had come on stage wearing the Turin shroud.
If true, his claims would fracture the 2,000-year-old pillars of Christian history: the New Testament reports that Jesus rose from the tomb after three days no ossuary necessary and after 40 days ascended into heaven. If Christ is not raised, said St Paul, who had quite a lot riding on it, then our faith is in vain.
Confusing for booksellers, too: should Dan Brown be moved to factual? After all, The Da Vinci Code also has Jesus getting in the family way with Mary Magdalene.
Cameron produced the Israeli Antiquities Authority to confirm that the 10 ossuaries or bone-boxes, originally dug up in a Jerusalem suburb in 1980 were inscribed with a collection of names pointing right back to the original Jesus and Mary. The inscriptions included Yeshua bar Yosef (Hebrew: Jesus son of Joseph), Maria, Matia (Matthew), Yose (Joseph), Mariamene e Mara (Greek: Mary the teacher or Mary Magdalene) and Yehuda bar Yeshua (Aramaic: Judah son of Jesus).
Finding just these names on coffins from the same 1st-century tomb was way too much of a coincidence, said Cameron. The chances of finding that combination together was like finding a grave marked Ringo next to others marked John, Paul and George.
As a way of promoting his film The Lost Tomb of Jesus, which airs tonight on the Discovery Channel, he could hardly have done more.
The film, he says, offers tangible, physical, archeological and in some cases forensic evidence for the existence of Jesus.
The only snag is that nobody is looking for any evidence. I cant believe how far behind the game he is, says Tom Wright, one of the Church of Englands leading New Testament scholars and now Bishop of Durham. Scholars from all religious traditions and none have no doubts that Jesus lived. The argument is about whether he was who he said he was.
As for the statistics and the names, Professor Geza Vermes, world authority on the life and times of Jesus and one of the first to study the 1st-century Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1947, finds Camerons claims more Hollywood than Jerusalem.
These are such common names of the time that nothing would oblige you to connect them with the figures of the New Testament. Youd also have to assume that Joseph and Mary who famously lived in Nazareth moved to Jerusalem to be buried there.
Now, says Professor Vermes, who calls himself a sympathetic agnostic, if we had an inscription saying This is Jesus, son of Joseph, celebrated as the Messiah, then we might be getting somewhere, because why would you need an ossuary if the body has been raised . . . but I wish I hadnt suggested that because it will give someone an idea!
Bruce Longenecker, New Testament specialist at St Andrews University, knows a thing or two about 1st-century names: of all those found in the relevant archeological area, 9% are Jesus, 14% Joseph, 10% Judas and 5% Matthew. Its not as if they had hundreds of names to choose from, so theres nothing statistically significant about finding such a grouping in Jerusalem at the time, he says.
But if Camerons claims are so risible, why the global fascination? Its the paradox of our religious curiosity in our allegedly secular age, says Longenecker. We have such a hunger to find ways of interpreting Jesus that are different to orthodox depictions, that artefacts are leapt on and massaged, often in rather farfetched ways.
The most famous 20th-century example was the Turin shroud, which fell from grace in the 1980s after radiocarbon dating suggested it was medieval smoke and mirrors. But while an ossuary or shroud can command a global 21st-century audience, down the centuries relics have always been box office. Collect all the pieces of the True Cross venerated in hundreds of European churches and you could rebuild Noahs Ark. From Veronicas Veil (used to wipe the forehead of Jesus) to the Crown of Thorns and the Holy Lance (which pierced Jesuss side to confirm his death), relics have always lured the devout.
There have been quite a few foreskins of Jesus, says Professor Vermes. And several heads of John the Baptist. The believer wants something tangible to confirm their faith, the unbeliever wants the same to disprove it.
Take it from me, he says, speaking as someone who knows, Neither will have it. History wont turn up that kind of proof.
But Keith Ward, former regius professor of divinity at Oxford University, wonders if the present fascination with shrouds and tombs is different from religious veneration. Relics offered a sense of devotion because of their perceived link to Jesus like people who collect football shirts but this modern obsession is the opposite.
Like The Da Vinci Code, it is the simple desire to shock even when the argument is breathtakingly literalistic, ludicrous and superstitious.
Its no different from campaigning secularists who have taken to attacking religious belief, Ward says. Its part of the same syndrome as Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett, writing shallow books which attack Christianity but are still taken seriously. As a scholar, I dont care if people arent religious, but I am dumbfounded at the second-rate thinking.
Regards, Ivan
Ping!
Ah, I love the scientific method applied here. I'm sold.
In all my fifty years I've never met anyone named Ringo.
Great line, and it applies to so much of the entertaining conspiracy theory stuff that many people enjoy reading. I need to always keep my critical faculties fully engaged when reading anything.
It's only so poplar because it attacks the group whom it's currently most PC to hate: bible-believing Christians. This is like finding remains labeled "John Doe Jr.", "John Doe" and "Jane Doe". Nothing from that grave site says "Christ" on it, does it?
Maybe not but Lorne Greene sure did.
Just one more anti Christ naysayer...pox on him and his so called discovery!
I've never met anyone named "Lorne", either.
lol pookie....
I will leave it to the readers to identify it.
But, like the global warming controversy, if it "tracks perfectly", it must be real.
Pity the perverts and their supporters didn't choose to set out to "prove" the fallacy of the world's second greatest religion...
This has been heavily promoted on television and in the print media. The MSM has mastered the art of disguising commercials as news or entertainment.When Steve Allen hosted the 'Tonight Show' it was pure entertainment. With Jay Leno it has morphed into an infomercial where 'celebrities' engage in superficial scripted dialog, and then 'entertain' us with a clip from their latest movie or a mention of their latest CD or book. It's all crap, as is 'The Lost Tomb of Jesus.
I'm still pissed off at having wasted two hours with that clown who claimed to have found Atlantis.
Same ol' same ol', but he waited two hours to deliver the 5 second punch line:
"Couldn't find the damned thing!"
Guess which loser's program I won't be watching again in the future?
Scholars from all religious traditions and none have no doubts that Jesus lived. The argument is about whether he was who he said he was.
The whole point of Cameron's efforts, starting with the title, is that Jesus was mere flesh.
I've met a Ringo. I've even met a 'Sloopy.'
Disagree. Without the resurrection, Christianity is just another second temple messianic sect. It is the FACT of the resurrection that sets Christianity apart from all other religions.
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