Jesus was married, had a son, and we have found his tomb....
Or at least Simcha Jacobivici would have us believe. Check out the article from the link below. I have posted this response on my church's blog.
Last night I went to bed and things were pretty normal. This morning I wake up and see on Good Morning America and read in the Toronto Star a project that claims to have found the family tomb of Jesus, along with bone boxes ("ossuaries") with inscriptions of names like, Jesus son of Joseph, Judah son of Jesus, Mariamne (a version of Mary), Mary, and Matthew. You can read the article at http://www.thestar.com/News/article/185708. If you haven't heard about this story, I'm sure you will before too long.
Now, I am always for Christians examining their faith and never burying their heads in the sand. If you saw the stories and had some doubts raised, that's not a bad thing. Just keep reading and doing some research and see where your conclusions go. I have done some initial thinking and recorded my thoughts below. Here are some of the facts of the story:
1. A tomb was found with certain inscriptions on bone boxes in the Talpiot neigbourhood of Jerusalem. It was uncovered in 1980 when building an apartment.
2. The bone boxes had inscriptions with biblical names (James, Joseph, Jesus, Mary, Mariamne, etc.)
3. DNA testing is being done to see if the genetic material found is related.
The producers of the documentary are claiming that this is evidence of this being Jesus' family tomb and showing that the biblical Jesus of Nazareth was married and had a son. A few things immediately undercut the evidence used to arrive at this conclusion.
First, Joseph's (Jesus' father by his marriage to Mary) family was from Bethlehem. (Remember them going to do a census that we read every Christmas?) Joseph then raised his family in Nazareth, about 80 miles from Jerusalem. If this tomb is the family tomb of Jesus, started by Joseph's burial, then Joseph was buried 80 miles from his family, alone, in a city his ancestors didn't come from. That's very strange and incredibly unlikely. Jesus' brother Joseph was martyred in Jerusalem, but, according to the early church historian Eusebius, his burial was not near the neighbourhood of Talpiot, where this tomb was discovered.
Second, the names found in the tomb were very prevalent. Joseph was the second most commonly recorded name, about 1/10 having this name. Greater than 1/5 were named Mary or Mariamne! (About 1/26 were named Jesus.) Having such names connected is no big surprise.
Third, these documentary makers are using DNA testing that was not available when the tomb was originally discovered. This DNA testing, I'm sure, will show a family relation between the people who were once buried in this tomb. What it cannot show, however, is the connection to the family of Jesus of Nazareth. For that to happen, there would need to be another sample confirmed from Jesus' family and then tested against the DNA found in the tomb. Nobody has that.
Fourth, if you read the Star article, the film maker, Simcha Jacobivici, says that
Last night I went to bed and things were pretty normal. This morning I wake up and see on Good Morning America and read in the Toronto Star a project that claims to have found the family tomb of Jesus, along with bone boxes ("ossuaries") with inscriptions of names like, Jesus son of Joseph, Judah son of Jesus, Mariamne (a version of Mary), Mary, and Matthew. You can read the article at http://www.thestar.com/News/article/185708. If you haven't heard about this story, I'm sure you will before too long.
Now, I am always for Christians examining their faith and never burying their heads in the sand. If you saw the stories and had some doubts raised, that's not a bad thing. Just keep reading and doing some research and see where your conclusions go. I have done some initial thinking and recorded my thoughts below. Here are some of the facts of the story:
1. A tomb was found with certain inscriptions on bone boxes in the Talpiot neigbourhood of Jerusalem. It was uncovered in 1980 when building an apartment.
2. The bone boxes had inscriptions with biblical names (James, Joseph, Jesus, Mary, Mariamne, etc.)
3. DNA testing is being done to see if the genetic material found is related.
The producers of the documentary are claiming that this is evidence of this being Jesus' family tomb and showing that the biblical Jesus of Nazareth was married and had a son. A few things immediately undercut the evidence used to arrive at this conclusion.
First, Joseph's (Jesus' father by his marriage to Mary) family was from Bethlehem. (Remember them going to do a census that we read every Christmas?) Joseph then raised his family in Nazareth, about 80 miles from Jerusalem. If this tomb is the family tomb of Jesus, started by Joseph's burial, then Joseph was buried 80 miles from his family, alone, in a city his ancestors didn't come from. That's very strange and incredibly unlikely. Jesus' brother Joseph was martyred in Jerusalem, but, according to the early church historian Eusebius, his burial was not near the neighbourhood of Talpiot, where this tomb was discovered.
Second, the names found in the tomb were very prevalent. Joseph was the second most commonly recorded name, about 1/10 having this name. Greater than 1/5 were named Mary or Mariamne! (About 1/26 were named Jesus.) Having such names connected is no big surprise.
Third, these documentary makers are using DNA testing that was not available when the tomb was originally discovered. This DNA testing, I'm sure, will show a family relation between the people who were once buried in this tomb. What it cannot show, however, is the connection to the family of Jesus of Nazareth. For that to happen, there would need to be another sample confirmed from Jesus' family and then tested against the DNA found in the tomb. Nobody has that.
Fourth, if you read the Star article, the film maker, Simcha Jacobivici, says that
Labels: empty tomb, Jesus, resurrection
6 Comments:
I am struck by a quote from Barth (surprize): "Theology must continue as though nothing has happened."
Precisely because in this case, NOTHING HAS HAPPENED.
Good post, AP.
Crusty
Aaron,
If I get questions on this "news" story from youth or others in the congregation I will be referencing them to you BLOG, thus spreading your fame to the great state of Georgia. Seriously, your factural points are helpful in showing this to be a "non-story". Thanks.
John
Thanks Crusty and John. The accolades go to Dr. Ben Witherington. He's the man.
Please forgive the typo above: Jesus' brother martyred in Jerusalem was, of course, James, not Joseph!
Make sure you check out James Tabor's website. Witherington has misrepresented a few facts that Tabor clears up. Though Tabor is arguing for the veracity of the Jesus Tomb, we must make sure we get our facts straight.
His blogsite: jesusdynasty.com/blog
Thanks, Anonymous. A quick perusal of the site finds that the most convincing element for Tabor is the name cluster, which he himself comments his inability to speak to the statistical probability. I still don't know why I would find that convincing.
Spinning the yarn around Jose is quite clever, but coherence of a narrative does not make it compelling in itself. If it did, then Tom Wright's coherence of the Jesus narrative, in my opinion, far surpasses what can be developed from this tomb. Coherence is also the best proof one has for the Mary's and their presence in the tomb.
Disagreeing with Witherington's interpretation of the facts is much different from misconstruing facts themselves.
Best wishes.
That's GOOD STUFF, AP!!
Your posts brings to light how easily this straw man burns up in the fires of logic.
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