I. INTRODUCTION.
A.
Tonight, at 9 pm on the
Discovery Channel, James Cameron, the man who found the final resting
place
of
the Titanic will provide another
spectacular find:
the tomb of Jesus.
1. Cameron
and numerous experts claim
that they have found an
archeological
discovery which will change the
course of history as we know it.
2. They
claim that in a tomb
discovered in
1980 are ossuaries, stone boxes which contain bones of deceased individuals, which bore the bones of Jesus; Mary Magdalene, his
wife; their child, named Judah; Mary, the mother of Jesus; and a man named Matthew.
3. In
2002, an ossuary was
discovered which purportedly held the remains
of James, Jesus’ brother.
a. The
inscription on that
ossuary read: “James, son of Joseph, brother of
Jesus.”
b. Most
scholars
now
believe that ossuary to be a forgery, but the filmmakers claim that
ossuary originated in the tomb
in Jerusalem.
B. What are we to make of these claims?
1. If
these claims are true,
they mean that Jesus did not
resurrect from the dead,
as we
believe, and that
he
did not ascend to heaven, as
we believe.
2. Tonight,
we
want to examine these
claims and show how absurd
they truly are.
II. A CRITIQUE OF THE TOMB.
A. It
is quite true
that ossuaries have been discovered
bearing the names of individuals
in the Gospel story.
1. There
is
absolutely
no reason, as far
as I
am aware, to believe that
these boxes
are forgeries nor to doubt in the least their
authenticity.
2. The
Discovery Channel on
their website provides a statistical
analysis of the names in the tomb and
the
likelihood that the ossuaries
bore the remains of Jesus and his family.
a.
They
claim that using
conservative
statistical analysis, the likelihood
that
this was the burial tomb of Jesus and his family at 600 to 1.
b.
The
tomb after all contains a
Mary, a
Jesus, son of Joseph, and
an
inscription they claim should read “Mary
Magdalene.”
3. The
statistical analysis carried out on the ossuaries is
absurd.
a. The
fact is that all the
names in the tomb were
extremely popular in the time period of Jesus and
his followers.
- Joseph was the second most popular name in that time period, Judah was the
fourth, Jesus was the sixth, and Matthew
was the ninth.
- Mary was by far the most common name
for women in that time
period. In fact, nearly a fourth of all
Jewish women in the time
of Christ
were named Mary.
- Therefore, is it any wonder that you would find a tomb with the inscriptions, Mary, Jesus,
son of Joseph, Judah, and Matthew?
It
would
be like finding a grave today with the name Smith, Williams,
Jones, or Johnson today.
b. In
1926 a “Jesus, son of
Joseph” ossuary was found in the basement
of what is now the
Rockefeller
Museum.
It is now in the Israel Museum.
c. One
news report tells of an ancient
document of a business deal between a man named
Jesus and another Jesus witnessed by yet another Jesus.
d. The
filmmakers make
much of the name “Jose,” a shortened form of Joseph, about how rare it is.
- It is true that the name Jose is quite rare among
the ossuaries of the first century.
- It is not true, however, that Jose is a
rare
name in the first century.
· It is the name of one of Jesus’
brothers (Mk 6:3).
o If
you notice the
NIV footnote, you notice the
name James is actually “Jose.”
o The
claim of the filmmakers is that this Jose in the
tomb is the brother of
Jesus Christ.
· One of the women who followed Jesus from a
distance at his crucifixion was the mother
of Jose (Mk 15:40).
· It was also the name of Barnabas (Acts
4:36).
e. For
the
theory
to work, this Jose must
be the
brother of Jesus.
- However, the Jesus in
the tomb
is identified as the “son of Joseph.”
- Since Jose is a nickname
for Joseph, why could this
Jose not
be the father of the Jesus identified in the tomb? There
is no good reason to
believe this Jose is the brother of the
Jesus in the tomb rather than his father.
f. The
filmmakers claim that the inscription
on the ossuary which reads Mariamme e Mara is Mary Magdalene.
- They claim that the
inscription on the ossuary literally reads
“Mary the teacher.”
- To make the connection
between Mary the teacher
and Mary Magdalene,
the filmmakers go to
Gnostic texts to make
the claim that Mary
was a great
teacher in the
early church. Two
points
deserve attention
at this point:
· The
Gnostics were heretics—they claimed
that
Jesus
never really came in
the
flesh.
· The texts in
which Mary was called a great teacher
in
the early church come from the 4th century, about 350
years after the
era of the
apostles.
· In
other words, Mary’s being
a
great teacher in the
early church was a later addition made
by
great
heretics in church history.
- One NT scholar
proposes that Mara does not mean
“teacher,” as the filmmakers
claim, but is actually a shortened form of Martha.
· He posits
that the ossuary may have
originally
contained the remains of two
women, one named Mary and the other named
Martha.
· The Jews
actually practiced double burial—they
would bury the remains of
someone in a cave, like
with Jesus, and then
when the flesh had
left
the bones, the remains
were placed in an ossuary. It would not be
uncommon, then, to find
an ossuary containing the remains
of
two individuals.
g. Interestingly,
the
ossuary
which supposedly bore the
remains of Jesus reads,
“Jesus, son of
Joseph.”
- Jesus was never
called “the son of Joseph” by his followers.
- Jesus was called “the
son of Joseph” by his detractors.
· Some
Jews
were grumbling
against Jesus and said, “Is this not Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose
father and mother we
know? How
can
he
now say, ‘I came down from heaven’?”
(Jn 6:42).
· “Now Jesus
himself was about thirty
years old when he began his
ministry. He
was
the son, so it was thought, of Joseph”
(Lk 3:23).
o That’s
a
significant passage, for Scripture was written by the followers of
Jesus.
o This
informs us
why, in all likelihood,
the followers of Jesus did
not refer to him as the
“son of Joseph”—they did not believe he was the son of Joseph.
- Mk 6:1-6.
· Here
Jesus is referred to as the “son of Mary.”
· In the first
century, you did not refer to someone
as
the
son of his mother, even if his father were
dead.
o Referring
to
someone as the son of
his mother
was a quite pejorative way
of
referring to him.
o It’s
like
referring to someone today
as “You
blankety-blank-blank.”
· Which brings
up an interesting question—Why did the people in Nazareth refer to Jesus as the son of Mary?
o Did
they not
understand that Joseph was not his father?
o Didn’t
they likely believe that Jesus was
illegitimate and therefore
that he
had no right to speak to them about
divine
things?
B. What about the DNA evidence
from the
tomb?
1. The
bones were removed from
the ossuaries and
reburied
according to Jewish custom.
2. DNA
testing was done on the “Jesus, son of Joseph”
ossuary and the so-called Mary Magdalene ossuary.
3. They
were
only able to do mitochondrial
DNA
testing which is only
able to test maternal
lines.
Thus,
the filmmakers were able to
establish that the Jesus in the tomb
and the Mary were not
related through
their mothers. They did not have the same mother.
4. They
take
quite a leap and
say that they were married.
a. It
is possible they were—there
would
be
nothing at all unusual
about a first
century Jew by the name of
Jesus
being married to another first century Jew by the name of Mary.
b. But,
the
fact that they were not maternally
related does not establish
that they
were husband and wife. If the Jose in
the tomb were a brother of
this
Jesus, Mary could have been married
to
him;
she
could also
have been married to the
Matthew buried there. C. What
about the other evidence? What
does it establish?
1. The
ancestral home of Joseph
was Bethlehem.
a. Then,
he
and his family lived in
Nazareth.
b. It
is quite likely, but not
established
fact, that Joseph died when they family was living in Nazareth.
c. Why
would
Joseph’s family
have a familial burial plot
in Jerusalem?
2. We
have absolutely no
evidence or hint from biblical or
other sources that Jesus was ever
married,
let
alone that he had a child. Remember the
Da Vinci code is fiction and does not claim to be otherwise.
3. Where
was
Mary, the mother of
Jesus, buried?
a. One
traditional location is
another place in Jerusalem.
b.
Much
more likely, however, is
Ephesus,
according to Eusebius,
the great
church historian, and other
ancient church tradition, which has much
more validity. Ephesus
is
a logical place for Mary’s
tomb since she was committed to the care of the apostle John, and he
lived much of his
life in Ephesus.
4. There
is
no ancient church tradition that any part
of Jesus’ family was
buried in Jerusalem.
a. Had
part
of
the family been buried in Jerusalem, the family tomb would likely have
been a popular
place for Jesus to visit.
b. Even
in
this day and age, graves
tend to be popular tourist
spots—I’ve
been to the tomb of Henry Clay, Alben Barkley (Harry Truman’s
VP), Daniel Boone,
and J. W. McGarvey.
5. The
tomb to be displayed
tonight on the Discovery
Channel is a quite expensive
tomb.
The family
of
Jesus was far from wealthy. For
them to
have been able to afford
this type of tomb, they would have had to have
had the support of the Jerusalem
church.
What are the implications
of
that?
a. The
early church would have
known where Jesus was buried.
- The early church would have gone to his
grave
to show him honor.
- But the church didn’t go to any tomb for many centuries, because they
didn’t know where
the garden tomb was, which
was only temporary until
the Resurrection.
b.
If
the
early
church knew where Jesus was buried,
why would they have gone out into the world proclaiming that he had been
resurrected and ascended
back to heaven? Why
would
they
have died proclaiming
such
a message?
III. HOW SOLID
IS THE BIBLICAL FAITH?
A. I had hoped tonight to spend
time on the historical
reliability of the
resurrection.
1. Time will not permit that this evening.
2. Next
week,
however,
we will discuss the resurrection
in light of the rigors of historical investigation.
B. Tonight, we have seen how
absurd the claims the
claims made by James Cameron
and his ilk are. I want us to close,
though, with a look at the
Scriptures
regarding the resurrection of
Christ.
1.
Mk
16:1-8.
2.
Jn
20:1-22.
3.
Rm 1:1-4.
4.
1
Cor
15:12-34.