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This
is a story about the Bible and truth. More precisely, it's about
biblical antiquities and how they can be seen to prove that the stories
told in the Bible really happened.
Five-and-a-half
years ago the world of biblical archaeology was rocked to its
foundations, and all because of a box. It was a stone box - called an
"ossuary" - that had been discovered in Israel. Ossuaries were used to
hold the bones of the dead some 2,000 years ago, in the time of Jesus.
And this ossuary was said hold the bones of Jesus' brother, James.
As
correspondent Bob Simon reports, the discovery created more excitement
among Christian scholars than anything since the Shroud of Turin. And
like the shroud, no sooner was it unveiled that charges of forgery
surfaced. In fact, a trial has been underway in Jerusalem for almost
three years. The box
is made of limestone. It's not terribly large, but it attracted a very
large crowd, over a 100,000, when it was first exhibited. It made the
New York Times and the cover of Biblical Archaeology Review.
New
Testament scholar Ben Witherington, who wrote a book about the box, was
at that first exhibit. "There was a lot of excitement. There was, you
know, the atmosphere was kind of palpable really. And there were
various of us just sort of buzzing around this exhibit," he remembers.
Actually, ossuaries are
quite common. The Israel Antiquities Authority keeps hundreds in its
basement. What was so special about this one was the mysterious
engraving on its side, sort of a Da Vinci Code in stone. It's written
in ancient Aramaic and it reads "James, Son of Joseph, Brother of
Jesus."
The first question: could this box have contained the bones of the man the Gospels mention as Jesus' brother?
"If it can be proven it's
probably one of the most important archaeological discoveries of the
century," says Steve Pfann, who like his wife Claire, is a scholar of
early Christianity, and based in the Holy Land.
The Pfanns believe the
ossuary is the first firm archaeological evidence that Jesus once lived
there. "That is really a great thing just to be able to confirm, from
an extra-biblical source, that a man named Jesus existed," Claire Pfann
explains.
The idea that Jesus had a
brother at all is a bone of contention. Many Catholics believe Mary was
a lifelong virgin, so James could not have been a blood brother. Either
way, after the crucifixion, James became the first Bishop of Jerusalem.
He died, it is written, in 62 A.D. when he was stoned by an angry mob
and fell from the walls of the Holy Temple.
The way things were done
back then, his body would have been put in a cave. And a year later,
when the flesh was gone, his bones would have been placed in an ossuary.
Archaeologists agree that
the box is genuine and that it dates from the time of James and Jesus.
Statisticians say the odds against it being anyone other than THE James
and Jesus are enormous. Two Israeli geologists gave it their stamp of
approval. But some experts felt they couldn't render a definitive
verdict because it was put on public display so quickly they didn't
have time to study it.
"The ossuary was kept more
or less secret by a small group of scholars who knew about it," says
Neil Silberman, a historian of archaeology who believes the box was
presented to the public by people more interested in showmanship than
science.
"It was thrust on the world
in a combination of public relations campaign and huge exhibition that
really didn't allow people to think about it," Silberman says.
"But that is how the world
operates these days is it not, if you find something as spectacular as
an ossuary with the name of Jesus on it?" Simon asks.
"Well maybe that's part of
the problem in studying the history of archaeology I'd have to say that
this is perhaps the most outrageous case of tabloid archaeology and the
most singular celebrity artifact I've ever seen," Silberman says.
And the problem with the artifact, according to Silberman and others, is not the box itself but the inscription.
A prominent historian said
the language of the inscription was "too perfect, too pat." Some
epigraphers - script experts - said the two halves of the inscription
don't match. The beginning, "James son of Joseph," is straight, the
letters formal. But the end, "Brother of Jesus," is uneven and the
letters are different. In other words, the words "Brother of Jesus,"
may have been added by a forger.
The question comes up
because the ossuary was not dug up at an authorized excavation, where
every shard is scrutinized by scholars. Like most so-called
antiquities, it just turned up in the shop of an antiques dealer, which
is another way of saying it was looted.
The Israel Antiquities
Authority has a special unit of archaeological detectives trying to
stop this trade. They spend their nights burrowing underground on the
trail of tomb-raiders, like those who may have stolen the ossuary from
the tomb of James. The trouble is, no one has any idea when that
happened, or where.
But we do know where it
turned up: in the Tel Aviv apartment of Oded Golan, an Israeli
entrepreneur, amateur pianist, and one of the world's biggest
collectors of biblical antiquities. He says he bought the ossuary from
an Arab dealer in the 1970s and never thought twice about the
inscription, because, as a Jew, he knew nothing about Jesus.
"I didn't know at the time
at all the Jesus had any siblings," says Golan, who says he had the
ossuary for more than 25 years and didn't know the potential
significance of it.
It was only in 2002, Golan
says, that an eminent scholar happened to see the ossuary at his home
and told him what the writing could mean. Golan sprung into action. He
had the box scrutinized by specialists in different fields. They were
impressed. So Golan shipped it off to Toronto for its unveiling before
a colloquium of archaeologists, who gave it their undivided attention.
After they'd had their
fill, the Israeli antiquities authority demanded that it be brought
back to Israel so they could have a look. They appointed two committees
to decide whether that inscription was cut 2,000 years ago, or much
more recently. Their conclusion: it was a fake.
The ossuary was returned to
Oded Golan. But then, just two months after it had been exhibited in
Toronto, there was another extraordinary revelation: a tablet was
secretly offered to Israel's National Museum with a reported price tag
of $4 million.
Why so much? It was billed
as the only remnant of the temple of King Solomon - a godsend for
religious Jews, because it would strengthen their claim to the Temple
Mount, which has been contested for centuries by Jews and Muslims.
First the ossuary, then the
tablet, both revealed in the space of two months. An amazing
coincidence. But the amazing coincidences don't stop there.
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