In my last blog, Disposing of Dead Bodies,
I referred to an edict, as told by the late Professor F.F. Bruce. Professor
Bruce retold the story of Roman Emperor Claudius and his edict to forbid
tampering with dead bodies. Because this edict was issued within fifteen years of
the resurrection of Jesus, I agreed with Professor Bruce and concluded that the
narrow time-span strongly suggested that the edict may have been a reaction to
the resurrection of Jesus. In addition, because the edict allegedly came from
Nazareth, the Jesus connection would seem natural.
Well, recent research strongly suggests that
I was wrong. Earlier this year, after
getting permission to extract a sample from the back of the tablet, which is
housed at the National Library of France, geochemists ground one milligram of
the marble into powder and used laser ablation to release the gas from the
marble’s minerals. By measuring the ratios of carbon and oxygen isotopes, they
captured the unique chemical fingerprint of the marble.
The study of the tablet published in the Journal
of Archaeological Science, clarified the origin of the tablet and points to
a finding different from what I stated in my last blog. In other words, to
infer that the “Nazareth Tablet” may have been as a result of the resurrection
of Jesus is wrong.
However, what is not wrong, is to conclude
that the bodily resurrection of Jesus did take place. Apart from the
affirmations from Scripture, there are other valid archaeological inferences that
could be made to confirm the resurrection of Jesus. One inference I often use
is the absent bone box.
Bone
boxes or ossuaries are made of limestone. In the first century, following death
and entombment, the bones of the diseased were taken and placed in a bone box
or ossuary. On the outside of the ossuary was inscribed the name of the deceased.
This process would take place sometime after one year of entombment. Ossuaries
would then be stored in a crypt (vault) like books are stored in a library. Of
the roughly 900 catalogued ossuaries from the first century, 250 bear
inscriptions.
In
1990, a bone chest was discovered accidentally during work in Jerusalem’s Peace
Forest. This “Caiaphas Ossuary” belonged to the high priest from CE 18-36. The
inscription, found in two places, read: “Caiaphas” and “Joseph, son of
Caiaphas.” First-century Jewish historian Josephus provided the full name,
“Joseph, who is called Caiaphas of the high priesthood.”
Archaeologists have found bone boxes for Pilate and even James,
the brother of Jesus, but no credible claims have been made concerning an
ossuary for Jesus. Should such an ossuary be found, that would be the death of
Christianity. At the heart of the Christian faith is the claim that Jesus died
and physically came back to life. To find an artifact that suggests otherwise
would be disastrous.
The apostle Paul expressed this view when he said, “and if Christ
has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins” (1
Corinthians 15:17). The issue for historians, is not so much the death of
Jesus. It is the claim that Jesus came back to life. To come back to life is
not humanly possible. Hence, the Christian claim is that God intervened and
brought Jesus back to life.
In
2007, the documentary “The Lost Tomb of Jesus” unveiled two ancient stone boxes
they claim may have once contained the remains of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. The
researchers for the film argued that ten small caskets discovered in 1980 in a
Jerusalem suburb may have held the bones of Jesus and his family.
But
that argument cannot be credible. It has been debunked by credible non-Christian
scholars. In addition, the family of Jesus came from Nazareth, approximately
eighty miles away from the area where this tomb was found. Furthermore, how was
this ossuary not found before?
Imagine,
by the third day following the death of Jesus, his followers were contending
that he was alive. From that moment, his fearful followers displayed strength.
They vigorously claimed to be eyewitnesses of Jesus, following his death. This
would have been before his remains should have been transferred to a bone box.
It would have been so easy to identify the tomb and confirm that the body of
Jesus was still in the tomb.
Fifty
days following the death of Jesus, Peter publicly claims that “God raised Jesus
from the dead” (Acts 2:24). Following this declaration, thousands of Jews made
commitments to follow the resurrected Jesus. Why wasn’t the declaration of
resurrection debunked by the authorities? That would have nullified the
commitments made at that Pentecost event.
However,
today, almost 2,000 years after the death of Jesus, many are still looking for his
bone box. There is one simple reason the bone box of Jesus would never be found
– no bone box was ever necessary. Bone boxes are for the deceased, not the
delivered.
1 comment:
This is good reading. I guess revelation is progressive. We will; get evidence that debunks our current belief about some things and we then change our viewpoint as revelation gives us a more detailed view of the big picture.
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