One of my favorite movies is the holiday-themed
A Christmas
Story. Every year as Christmas approaches, I pull out the tale of
Ralphie, a 1940's kid who listens to Orphan Annie on the radio and
pines for "an official Red Ryder carbine action two-hundred shot
range model air rifle with a compass in the stock and this thing
that tells time."
One scene in the film shows an excited Ralphie receiving his
Orphan Annie secret decoder pin. After transcribing the radio code,
he locks himself in the bathroom, working feverishly to crack
Annie's urgent communiqué. Ralphie wonders, "What could this
important code from Annie be?" The message finally translates to "Be
sure to drink your Ovaltine" and Ralphie is crushed that he placed
all his faith in a "crummy commercial".
That's the way it is for many folks in Hollywood. They want to
sell you the illusion, and make money off it in the process. Even if
there is no real danger or real secret, they'll make it up just so
they can market something to an unsuspecting public. As an example,
let's look at the
Discovery Channel's special from a few years ago,
The Lost Tomb of Jesus. Produced by James Cameron of
Terminator and
Titanic fame, and directed and narrated by Simcha Jacobovici, the
show tries to claim that "the 2,000-year-old ‘Tomb of the Ten
Ossuaries' belonged to the family of Jesus of Nazareth."
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They
further try to press the point that this somehow deals a fatal blow
to the New Testament. James Cameron states in an interview that
"Faith and forensics make very uneasy bedfellows.. Faith implies
essentially the lack of a need for evidence… The scientific method
is in direct opposition to that. You have to investigate, you have
to find the proof."
2 Jacobovici tantalizes us with lines such as "The
New Testament doesn't say that Jesus had a son, but perhaps in this
instance, archaeology forces us to throw a different light on the
New Testament".
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What We Know About the Tomb
Is there reasonable evidence to believe that a Jewish burial tomb
containing Jewish burial boxes from the first century held the
remains of Jesus of Nazareth and his family? When we look at the
evidence, what we find is that Cameron and Jacobovici are more
interested in selling the idea that what they found is new evidence
than producing actual evidence for a find. We have a two-hour
television special that is nothing more than hype with no substance.
First, let's strip away the hyperbole and see exactly what was
found.
Facts from the Special:
- A tomb was found in 1980 in the Talpiot area of Jerusalem,
hewn out of rock
- The tomb contained ten ossuaries to hold the remains of the dead
buried there.
- Six of the ossuaries bore names inscribed on them including
Jesus, son of Joseph; a form of Joseph (Jose), Matthias (Matthew)
and Judah son of Jesus
- Two ossuaries bear female names: a Latin version of the name Mary
using Aramaic letters (Mariah); and another with a version of the
name Mary (Mariamne) and a full title supposedly reading "Mary known
as the master".
- Some residual DNA shows that several of the people who were
buried in the tomb were related in some way.
- The DNA also shows that the occupant of the Jesus ossuary was not
related to the occupant of the Mariamne ossuary.
From these facts, the filmmakers make all kinds of assumptions.
First, the coffin marked "Jesus, son of Joseph" pricks their
interest. They then note that all the names in the tomb are also
found in the New Testament. They believe that since the Mariah
ossuary uses a Latin version of Mary, this could likely be Jesus'
mother, since she was known by the Latin version of her name. They
believe that the Mariamne box held the bones of Mary of Magdala, who
would be Jesus' wife, since she is not a blood relative of the
family.
Seeing the Truth
I think even a cursory look at the actual evidence and the
conclusions that the show tries to draw demonstrate just how much
the filmmakers are straining to make a connection. Let's take the
names as an example. Dr. Darrel Bock pulled data from Richard Baukham of St. Andrews, in his book
Jesus and the Eyewitnesses. He gives us a breakdown of name
frequencies in first century Palestine:
"Out of a total number of 2625 males, these are the figures for
the ten most popular male names among Palestinian Jews. The first
figure is the total number of occurrences (from this number, with
2625 as the total for all names, you could calculate percentages),
while the second is the number of occurrences specifically on
ossuaries.
1 Simon/Simeon 243 - 59
2 Joseph 218 - 45
3 Eleazar 166 - 29
4 Judah 164 - 44
5 John/Yohanan 122 - 25
6 Jesus 99 - 22
7 Hananiah 82 - 18
8 Jonathan 71 - 14
9 Matthew 62 - 17
10 Manaen - Menahem 42 - 4
For women, we have a total of 328 occurrences (women's names are
much less often recorded than men's), and figures for the 4 most
popular names are thus:
Mary/Mariamne 70 - 42
Salome 58 - 41
Shelamzion 24 - 19
Martha 20 - 17 4
You can see at once that all the names you're interested were
extremely popular. 21% of Jewish women were called Mariamne (Mary).
The chances of the people in the ossuaries being the Jesus and Mary
Magdalene of the New Testament must be very small indeed."
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Of course, you never hear that 122 tombs have been found with the
name of Jesus and that Joseph is the second most popular name
discovered on ossuaries. Or, the show doesn't report that an ossuary
in 1926 was found with the same "Jesus, son of Joseph" inscription.
The authors next try to impress us with the facts that another
other ossuaries bear names identical to Jesus' brother, Joses
(Joseph). While this may be true, we saw that Joseph is the second
most common name in first century Palestine. But what about Jesus'
other brothers? If this is a family crypt, where are James, and
Simon, and Judas? The Judas we have in the tomb is the son of Jesus,
not his brother. And who is the Matthew? We have no history of a
Matthew as being a living blood relative during Jesus' time.
Of course the fact that there's a tomb at all causes all sorts of
problems. First, Jesus' family was too poor to afford a rock -;hewn
tomb which was quite expensive in that day. Even if they could
afford one, though, the family resided in Nazareth, not Jerusalem.
Why wouldn't the entire family have a crypt there?
Next, you come to the problem of the reports of the empty tomb
itself. Bodies take about a year to decompose before they are ready
to be placed into an ossuary. If Jesus' family had a tomb in
Jerusalem, do you think that the leaders of the Sanhedrin would have
gone to find it and squash the Christian young Christian movement
before it started? And why would all the apostles, including Jesus'
brothers James and Jude, die martyrs' deaths without even one of
them recanting and confessing that they made the resurrection story
up.
Finally, we have DNA evidence that proves, well, nothing at all.
So Mariamne wasn't related to Jesus. So what? This doesn't make her
his wife. She could have been Matthew's wife, or Judah son of Jesus'
wife. It's a huge stretch to try and connect two people in a civil
union just because they aren't blood relatives.
An Attempt to Sell
There are more problems, but space prohibits me from going into
any further detail. In fact, there are so many more problems with
this "lost tomb" that Professor Amos Kloner, the respected Israeli
archeologist who was in charge of the initial examination of the
tomb and its contents says that the special is nothing more than a
marketing ploy. Kloner remarks, "The claim that the burial site [of
Jesus] has been found is not based on any proof, and is only an
attempt to sell. I refute all their claims and efforts to waken a
renewed interest in the findings. With all due respect, they are not
archeologists."
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Like Ralphie in the Christmas movie, I hope that folks take a
skeptical look at specials like this and see them for what they really are: empty messages that
are
nothing more than people hoping to make money off controversy. Perhaps
the Discovery Channel needs to get some cross-play between their
shows. I'm sure that someone with the skepticism of the MythBusters would be able
to see the flaws in this special and take it for what it really is:
a two-hour "crummy commercial".
References