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Sunday, March 04, 2007
Gregory Koukl :: Townhall.com Columnist
Wailing at the Tomb?
by Gregory Koukl
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The documentary “The Lost Tomb of Jesus” hadn’t even aired yet and many Christians were already in a panic. Just the suggestion that someone found Jesus’ bones in a limestone box had believers by the droves shaking their fists or sticking their heads in the sand in a don’t-confuse-me-with-the-facts posture.

Apparently, many Christians don’t even need to see the evidence to pass judgment. When one Evangelical web site polled its visitors with the question, “Do you believe the ‘Tomb of Jesus' documentary, which denies the resurrection of Christ?” 97% said no. This was three days before the documentary even aired. Blind faith is so convenient, isn’t it? You never have to actually confront your critics.

Then there’s the bullies. One media watchdog demanded Discovery “cancel this slanderous ‘documentary.’” Another prominent Evangelical organization composed this letter for their constituents to hammer Discovery with:

I resent the Discovery Channel's attempt to demean and belittle Christianity by saying it is based on a lie. It is hard for me to believe that The Discovery Channel would dare do such a “documentary” on any other religion.

It may turn out that you have done Christianity a favor by awakening millions of Christians to your anti-Christian bias and bigotry. Perhaps they will no longer stay silent.

This kind of bullying is profoundly embarrassing to me, a follower of Christ, and should be discomfiting to every thoughtful Christian. It is not only a dismal retreat from a legitimate challenge that must be answered; it’s obscurantist.

Look, if the Bible says it and you believe it, that might settle it for you, but it doesn’t settle it for millions who might be interested in your ideas and are waiting to hear a thoughtful response to what appears on the surface to be a fair challenge.

There are good reasons to doubt the conclusions of this documentary, but no one will ever know them if Christians pull up the drawbridge and bellow from the parapet. Having seen the documentary, here are some problems that quickly come to mind:

• Scholars have known about these tombs for over 25 years. There’s a reason they haven’t taken these names seriously. Only three have any direct biblical significance: Jesus, Mary, and Joseph. And that cluster of names is statistically unremarkable. In fact, it would be odd if a family with those three names was not found in a tomb together, given their common use (there are at least four ossuaries discovered inscribed “Jesus, son of Joseph,” and one in four women were named Mary, so it’s even money that one of these tombs would have that combination). And connection of Jesus to any of the other names? Wild speculation. So what you have here is a creative guessing game.

• The entire argument is based on the statistical significance of the names in a cluster. If Jesus was married, and if Jesus was married to a woman named Mariamne, and if Mariamne was also a nickname for Mary Magdalene, and if Jesus had a brother named Matthew, and if Jesus had a son named Judas, and if the now-famous James ossuary belonged to James the brother of Jesus, then you’d have all the members of Jesus’ family together in one tomb. But that’s a lot of “ifs.”

• Even though this is called the “Jesus Family Tomb,” there is no hard evidence that any of these so-called “family members” is even related. The only DNA testing that’s been done—between Jesus and Mariamne—came up negative. Let me repeat that: The DNA test came up negative. That is fact. The rest is speculation. Continued...

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About The Author

Gregory Koukl is founder and president of Stand to Reason, an organization devoted to a thoughtful and engaging defense of classical Christianity in the public square. He is also a radio talk show host and author of Relativism—Feet Firmly Planted in Mid-Air.

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I want that one ...
Here is an open letter to all the born-again-atheists out there who think I should waste time watching James Cameron's documentary to "get both sides of the story" I am already saturated with the liberal point of view - why do you think I'm reading Townhall.com?

If you need to be an atheist, then become a humanist. Read Sartre, Camus and Kafka and devote your time to understanding the human condition. We might not agree, but at least you will still be a human being. (avoid Nietzsche)

Alternatively, you could bore us stupid quoting Richard Dawkins. All you will do is demonstrate that you are spiritually and philosophically challenged.

(1) Materialism is defeated by Cogito Ergo Sum. Deal with it.

(2) Using physics to enquire into metaphysical questions is like using mathematics to explain the taste of a banana to someone without taste buds. And the taste of a banana is an irreducible phenomenon - as is the colour yellow.

(3) Using logic to answer ultimate questions is illogical (Robert Pirsig demonstrated that in Zen & Art of Motorcyle Maintenance). Or do you really believe that ultimate ontological truth can be reduced to the level of boolean algebra?

(4) Don't look all smug when you demonstrate that a flock of birds can be reduced to a few mathematical equations. Try reducing Shakespeare to the letters of the alphabet, and let's see if you obtain the same insights.

By the way - whilst I am signing off, my internet radio has chosen Angels by Robbie Williams. So there.

kath
Wish I'd said that. Great post!
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