THE JESUS TOMB SHOW--BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGISTS REJECT DISCOVERY CHANNEL SHOW'S CLAIMS
You can tell things are
coming unraveled when every Biblical archaeologist, save
possibly one, interviewed either in the Discovery Channel
special or in the hour long debate thereafter repudiates
or is unpersuaded by the findings of the show. Both
William Dever and Jonathan Reed were not merely dubious
about the findings of the show. Reed actually called it
archaeo-porn, the worst sort of misuse of archaeological
evidence to support a tendentious theory that is so
speculative it requires linking one weak hypothesis to
another to another to reach a conclusion.
In addition, both Amos Kloner and Joe Zias, two of the
original archaeologists involved in the project, have
openly on television and in the public forum repudiated
the findings of the show in strong terms. I have had a
strongly worded email from Joe Zias in the last 24 hours
saying that the data was deliberately manipulated at
various points. I will come back to that point in a
moment.
Since Charles Pellgrino, the co-author of the The Jesus
Family Tomb book, is not a Biblical archaeologist at all,
but rather a forensic one, and apparently has never dug a
Biblical site, he certainly cannot count as an expert in
this field either. This leaves only Shimon Gibson, which,
if I am understanding things right (I am happy to be
corrected on this), was only a young artist, a sketch
artist for the original excavation of the Talpiot tomb. He
says he is skeptical of the results, but then he says he
is skeptical by nature. In other words, the show could not
find the sort of experts in Biblical archaeology which
would have lent real credence to their theory.
This stands in contrast to when Andre LeMaire was prepared
to put his good reputation on the line to say that the
James ossuary is genuine (and this word just in. He still
thinks that, and the recent evidence presented in the
trial in Jerusalem of genuine patina from the word 'Jesus'
on the James box inscription provides further evidence for
this conclusion).
Back to what Zias and I were discussing. It has to do with
the James ossuary. First of all, the makers of this film
and book were told that the tenth ossuary found in the
Talpiot tomb was not missing. It was a blank, having
neither ornamentation nor inscription, and so it was not
catalogued with the other nine. However, on the show,
mystery is concocted when the list of the nine catalogued
ossuaries is presented and it is concluded one is missing,
which is false.
Blank ossuaries are a dime a dozen. You can buy one in the
market in Jerusalem for a very reasonable price. There
never was a mystery about the 10th ossuary. One was
concocted for this show. It is also the case that the
makers of this film were told clearly that the tenth
ossuary had no inscription and in addition did not match
up with the dimensions of the James ossuary, which is the
focus of the book Hershel Shanks and I wrote for Harper
entitled The Brother of Jesus. More information about it
can be found in that book.
There are further problems as well in connection with the
James ossuary. The claim is made in the debate follow up
show that Oded Golan said that somewhere around 1980 he
bought the James ossuary. This is false. Golan has
consistently maintained that he bought this ossuary before
the Israeli law changed in 1978. In fact he claims to have
bought it in the mid-70s and at the trial that continues
in Jerusalem a 1970s era picture of him with the inscribed
James ossuary was produced. The reason that the date is
important is because after 1978 all such important
artifacts found in Israel belong to the state of Israel.
They cannot belong to a private collector like Oded Golan.
For the reader wanting to see proof positive of this, see
p. 84 of the Brother of Jesus book. The other reason that
is important is it means the James ossuary could not
possibly have come from the Talpiot tomb at all since it
was not opened until 1980. The next feeble attempt to save
the show's theory will perhaps be to claim there were
other ossuaries in the Talpiot tomb that went missing from
some break in. Not no. 10, but rather no 11 perhaps? Of
course this will be a complete argument from silence. We
do not know there were more than 10 ossuaries in that tomb
ever.
Other sorts of problems that crop up from the show itself
include:
1) The DNA lab in Thunder Bay was not told that they were
testing alleged samples from Jesus and Mary Magdalene. Why
is this important? For the very good reason that the lab
no doubt wishes to keep its good name, and not be
associated with sensationalistic projects of dubious
merit. Had they been told in advance, then at least they
could have decided whether they wanted to be involved in
the project. This is not how a free and open historical
inquiry into a subject proceeds. It is not shrouded in
secrecy until unveiled at a press conference in order to
make big news, garner big ratings, and sell lots of books.
2) Ted Koppel's own correspondence with the DNA lab, and
with the statistician reported in the follow up debate
finds those folks doing their best to distance themselves
from the conclusions of the show, and insisting that it is
only a remote possibility.
3) At one juncture we are told that the name Mariamenon is
found in Hippolytus a second century church historian. Two
problems with this. Firstly so far as I can see, that name
never occurs in the works of Hippolytus (and the name
Mariamene is not the same name, see the previous post with
Richard Bauckham's analysis of the names). Secondly,
Hippolytus died in about A.D. 236. He comes to us from the
end of the second century A.D. He could never have known
any eywitnesses or even second-third generation followers
of Jesus. Even if he did mention the name in question (the
one on the ossuary found at Talpiot), he provides no early
second century evidence for this name, much less for the
theory that this name is one way of referring to Mary
Magdalene. In fact the Acts of Philip, at best a fourth
century document is the basis of the theory of Prof. Bovon
that Mariamenon= Mary Magdalene, but nowhere in that
document are the two equated. The woman referred to in
that document is an evangelist in Greek who is the sister
of Philip (whether Philip the apostle or the later Philip
the evangelist found in Acts 8, we could debate). In other
words, we have no hard evidence at all that equates Mary
Magdalene with this particular name, or even with the
later figure found in the Acts of Philip. There is then
certainly no first or second century evidence that Mary
Magdalene was every called by the name on the Talpiot
ossuary, or would have been labeled this on a first
century A.D. ossuary. And why again would her inscription
be in Greek, and all the other ones in the tomb in Aramaic
or Hebrew? We are not told.
4) Towards the end of the program itself, we discover that
the intrepid amateur archaeologists, namely the film maker
and his cohorts failed to even ask the IAA for permission
to find and reopen the sealed Talpiot tomb. But this was
an IAA controlled archaeological site now adjacent to an
apartment complex. And when the IAA did find out about the
snooping around in a tomb without permission, they came
and put a stop to it. But the most interesting thing found
when the filmmaker was in the tomb was a very large Greek
inscription inside the tomb. What does this suggest? It
suggests to me this is not the tomb of the Aramaic
speaking family of Jesus of course!
5) Strong objection was taken in the debate program to the
dramatizations in the show because they present the theory
of the filmmakers as if they were facts. There are not,
for example any dramatizations of other theories. What's
the problem with this? Well as one professor from Virginia
Seminary rightly pointed out, drama is powerful. It's a
form of preaching and persuasion. If this really were an
open ended historical inquiry and not an argument for a
particular point of view, not a docu-drama, this sort of
filming technique would not have been used.
6) No mention at all is made of the fact that though we
only have a few hundred ossuaries with inscribed names,
there is in fact another ossuary with the inscription
'Jesus son of Joseph'. Apparently this was not a rare
combination of names at all, and in any case, as I have
said Jesus of Nazareth is never called 'son of Joseph' by
his family, or by his disciples. Notice how Luke pours
cold water on that theory in Luke 3.21-- "Now Jesus
himself was about 30 when he began his ministry, he was
the son, so it was supposed/thought, of Joseph." Supposed
by whom? Clearly not by Luke or the family whom Luke has
just shown knew about the virginal conception of Jesus.
Even the cousins knew about this miracle when Mary told
Elizabeth. There can be no good reason Luke would put it
this way if he knew the earliest followers of Jesus or
members of his family had thought that Jesus was son of
Joseph.
7) The unique theory presented in the show is that John 19
presents a conversation between Jesus on the cross and his
wife Mary Magdalene, with their son being the Beloved
Disciple! The problem of course with this is that Jesus is
addressing his own mother, Mary. John 19.26 is quite
clear--- Jesus saw his mother standing there, and spoke to
her about the Beloved Disciple, who is certainly not his
son. In John 13 and following the Beloved Disciple is
portrayed as one of the adult disciples in the upper room.
Not as a child. Here is but one more example of how normal
interpretations of the Biblical evidence are ignored and
rejected in favor of rewriting the text to support the
theory, and much later non-eyewitness Gnostic evidence
from the Acts of Philip is made crucial to the case, even
when that evidence itself does not likely support the case
at all!
8) An important further corollary was pointed out as well.
This special is an example of film-making, not good
investigative journalism. Consider for example the
difference between how this project was pursued and say
the efforts of Robert Graysmith, recently blogged about
here, who took years and years of investigating without
pay to be able to demonstrate who the Zodiac killer was.
He did not present his evidence in book form until he was
sure. Until he chased down all leads. Until he convinced
at least some of the police he had been bugging for years
to consider this or that piece of evidence and solve the
case. This docu-drama falls far short of what would be
called good investigative journalism.
To paraphrase a famous phrase "This is how a bad theory
ends, this is how a bad theory ends, not with a bang, but
a whimper."



