Jesus 'Tomb' Controversy Reopened 

Time Magazine, Jan 16, 2008

Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2008 By TIM MCGIRK/JERUSALEM 

The Talpiot tomb.
Discovery / EPA

When the Discovery Channel aired a TV documentary last year raising the 
possibility that archeologists had found the family tomb of Jesus Christ in the 
hills behind Jerusalem, it caused a huge backlash among Christians. The claim, 
after all, challenged one of the cornerstones of Christian faith - that Jesus, 
after his crucifixion, rose bodily to heaven in his physical form.

The Lost Tomb of Jesus, made by Hollywood director James Cameron and Canadian 
investigative journalist Simcha Jacobovici, was shown only once on Discovery. 
Britain's Channel 4 canceled its own plans to air the documentary, which 
reexamines an archeological find from 1980 in which a crypt was found 
containing what were said to be the ossuaries of Joseph, Mary, Jesus, the son 
of Joseph, Mariamne (possibly Mary Magdalene, say the filmmakers) and Judah, 
son of Jesus. Given the highly explosive nature of its conclusion and its 
slapdash sleuthing, it was no surprise that the film was panned by some 
academics and many Christian clerics. 

Still, even after the furor over the film faded, the questions it raised about 
the tomb unearthed in 1980 continued to make waves among archeologists and 
Biblical scholars. A leading New Testament expert from Princeton Theological 
Seminary, Prof. James Charlesworth, was intrigued enough to organize a 
conference in Jerusalem this week, bringing together over 50 archeologists, 
statisticians and experts in DNA, ceramics and ancient languages, to give 
evidence as to whether or not the crypt of Christ had been found. Their task 
was complicated by the fact that since the tomb was opened in 1980, the bones 
of the various ossuaries had gone missing through a mishap of Israeli 
bureaucracy. Also gone were diagrams made by excavators that showed where each 
stone sarcophagus lay inside the tomb, and what the family relationships might 
have been, say, between Jesus and Mary Magdelene, who some speculate may have 
been his wife. 
After three days of fierce debate, the experts remained deeply divided. Opinion 
among a panel of five experts ranged from "no way" to "very possible". 
Charlesworth told TIME: "I have reservations, but I can't dismiss the 
possibility that this tomb was related to the Jesus clan." Weighing the 
evidence, says Charlesworth, "we can tell that this was the tomb of a Jewish 
family from the time of Jesus. And we know that the names on the ossuaries are 
expressed the correct way as 'Jesus, son of Joseph.'" But the professor has a 
few doubts. "The name on Jesus's ossuary was scrawled on, like graffiti. There 
was no ornamentation. And there should have been. After all, his followers 
believed he was the Son of God."
There was a revelation of sorts. The widow of Joseph Gat, the chief 
archeologist of the 1980 excavation electrified the conference by saying: "My 
husband believed that this was Jesus's tomb, but because of his experiences as 
a Holocaust survivor, he was worried about a backlash of anti-Semitism and he 
didn't think he could say this."
The tomb was found by construction workers digging the foundations for an 
apartment building in the Talpiot hills, a modern suburb of Jerusalem. Gat and 
two other archeologists excavated the tomb, which had been vandalized centuries 
earlier. The ossuaries, including one with the scrawl "Jesus, son of Joseph" 
were moved into an antiquities warehouse where they languished, forgotten, 
until a BBC film crew in 1996 dusted them off. Jacobovici took the story 
further, using statistics - later disputed by experts - which seemed to 
indicate that, although Jesus and the others were all common Jewish names 
during the days of the Second Temple, the chances of them all being found in 
the same crypt, belonging to the same family, were rare indeed.

The debate over Jesus' supposed tomb will probably rage for years to come. But 
the conference attendees voted unanimously that the tomb, now sealed over with 
concrete in the garden of a suburban apartment building, should be reopened and 
examined more carefully. "I feel vindicated," Jacobovici told TIME. "It's moved 
from 'it can't be the Jesus' family tomb' to 'it could be.' "

Charlesworth, who is also a Methodist minister, says that the possible 
discovery of Christ's tomb will elicit mixed reactions among Christians. Most, 
he believes, will view it positively. The faith of some believers, he says, 
will be buoyed by historical proof that Christ, the son of Joseph and Mary, did 
exist. "I don't think it will undermine belief in the resurrection, only that 
Jesus rose as a spiritual body, not in the flesh." He adds: "Christianity is a 
strong religion, based on faith and experience, and I don't think that any 
discovery by archeologists will change that."


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