|
Blog entry written by Bill Witherington, who 'debunks' the "Tomb of
Jesus" Theory:------------
Having now scrutinized the book The Jesus Family Tomb book which
accompanies the show there are further things that need to be stressed that
are wrong with this whole theory and its varied speculations
There
is a major problem with the analysis of the names on these ossuaries. By
this I mean one has to explain why one is in Hebrew, several are in
Aramaic, but the supposed Mary Magdalene ossuary is in Greek. This suggests
a multi-generation tomb, not a single generation tomb, and indeed a tomb
that comes from after A.D. 70 after the Romans had destroyed the temple
mount and Jewish Christians fled the city. This tomb is not in old
Jerusalem. It is nowhere near the
Temple
mount, and we already know that the tomb of James was near the
Temple
Mount. The earliest Jewish Christians in
Jerusalem, including the members of Jesus’ family
and Mary Magdalene, did not speak Greek. They spoke Aramaic. We have
absolutely no historical evidence to suggest Mary Magdalene would have been
called by a Greek name before A.D. 70. She grew up in a Jewish fishing
village called Migdal, not a Greek city at all. It makes no sense that her
ossuary would have a Greek inscription and that of her alleged husband an
Aramaic inscription.
The argument that the ‘Matthew’ ossuary still works with the theory this is
a clan tomb because Mary had ancestors named Matthew does not work. We
would need more distant descendants named Matthew, or immediate offspring
named Matthew, neither of which we have. Ancestors are irrelevant, and in
any case it is disputed whether the genealogy in Luke 3 is Mary's rather
than Joseph's. None of the brothers of Jesus as listed in the NT are named
Matthew.
Mary Magdalene is called ‘Maria’ constantly in first century Christian
literature, and indeed well into the second century as well. She is never
called Mariamene or the like. It is anachronistic and inappropriate to
bring in later Gnostic document evidence from the Acts of Philip or the
Gospel of Mary, neither of which date before the end of the second century
A.D. to make your case when you have perfectly good first century data to
help you. In fact, in regard to the former manuscript what we have is a 14th
century manuscript which is theorized to go back to the fourth century A.D.
It does not identify Mariamene as Mary Magdalene, rather it identifies
her as the sister of Philip the apostle. It is the unproven theory of
Francis Bovon, without real supporting evidence that Mariamene refers to
Mary Magdalene. There are two problems with this:
1)
we have both Mary Magdalene, and Philip in the NT, and the two are never
connected at all. Indeed they are from different cities it seems clear. In
terms of historical methodology you cannot use later Gnostic documents
filled with wild fictional accounts, indeed fairy tales, about talking
animals (yes we have that in the Acts of Philip) and like and be taken
seriously when you want to make historical claims on the basis of such
later and non-historically oriented evidence;
2)
the accounts in the Acts of Philip have Maramene evangelizing foreign
countries, yet on the argument of the film producers of this Discovery
Channel special, she stayed in Jerusalem and was buried there with Jesus.
In other words, we have no good historical connection between the sister of
Philip, and Mary Magdalene. None.
Jesus is never called ‘son of Joseph’ by anyone who knew him intimately in
the NT--- not
by his family members, and not by his disciples. Indeed where this idea
arises, for example, in John 6.42 the Jewish officials who are accosting
Jesus call him ‘son of Joseph’ (cf. Jn. 8.41). These can only be called
hostile witnesses, not those who were likely to have known the actual case.
It is telling that in Nazareth
itself, in our account in Mk. 6.1-6 in our earliest Gospel Jesus is called
“the carpenter, the son of Mary”. Now in that patriarchal culture you don’t
call a person a ‘son of their mother’ even if the father has died. That is
a pejorative way of addressing a person, rather like calling them an S.O.
you know what today. Did the people in
Nazareth
know there was something unusual about Jesus’ origins, and it disconnected
him from Joseph? Yes they did, which is why they were angry and did not
think Jesus had any right to teach them. He was probably viewed as a mamzer,
as Dr. Bruce Chilton has argued—an illegitimate child. And this is
precisely what James Tabor argues in his Jesus Dynasty book, claiming he
was the son of a Roman soldier named Pantera. But of course now, he has
reversed himself to support the Jesus Family Tomb theory. You can’t have it
both ways, and in fact neither are correct. Jesus was not the physical
descendent of Joseph, was known not to be by his hometown folks. The
uncharitable suggested he was illegitimate but Mary claimed his conception
was a miracle. Those are the two opposing explanations we have from the
first century about Jesus’ origins. What we do not have is a tradition that
Jesus would have been called ‘son of Joseph’ by members of his own family
or his disciples—and that is what is required if the Talpiot tomb is a
family tomb.
The second word on the Mariamene ossuary is Mara which is short for Martha
another female name. It is not a reference to her being a master or
teacher. You need to remember that the inscriptions on these ossuaries are
very different in character to the one on the James ossuary. The latter has
an honorific or monumental inscription on the side of the ossuary in a
clear steady hand. The former all have what I call toe tag inscriptions
scrawled hastily on the boxes as they are interred in order to distinguish
the ossuaries. All that was required then was names, just names. No
honorific additions like we find on monumental inscriptions would be used.
So either we have two women in this ossuary, perhaps sisters, or we have
one woman neither of which names match up with the first century naming
of Mary Magdalene.
There is an interesting rosette or symbol over the Talpiot tomb, and from
the pictures in the book inside the tomb as well. This is very interesting
and it tells us one thing. This was a highly unusual and ornamental tomb
meant to be recognized by the symbol. It is not, and indeed was not a
secret tomb where a despised split off sect of Jesus following Jews could
have hidden the bodies of Jesus or James or other family members. The
ornamental decoration is meant to attract attention and draw people to the
tomb. Indeed it is meant to distinguish the tomb from others. This is the
opposite of what we would expect if this is a pre-70 A.D. Jesus family
tomb. Remember we have clear historical evidence that Saul of Tarsus, from
his own letters and from Acts was a persecutor of Christians. By the 40s
this persecution got so bad that some Christians fled the city (see the
sweep and trajectory of the story in Act 3-9). Under no circumstances would
these beleaguered early Jewish Christians have been advertising where the
bones of Jesus laid, if they knew.
No
explanation is given as to why we have a monumental or honorific
inscription on the James ossuary, but not on these other ones. My view
would be that this makes clear that the James ossuary was not originally in
the Talpiot tomb, indeed not likely there at any point.
Much is made of the fact that the chemical analysis of the patina on the
James ossuary and some of the ossuaries in the Talpiot tomb match up. This
is not actually surprising at all since you can find terra rosa in various
locales in and around Jerusalem.
This analysis cannot prove that these ossuaries all came from the same
place or were interred in the same spot. Terra
rosa
is not a soil specific to the Talpiot region! And why is nothing at all
mentioned about the very different sort of soil found within the James
ossuary and not in these others--- namely soil from Silwan, which is where
the James ossuary likely came out of the earth. Silwan is indeed within
sight of the temple mount. Talpiot is not. It is miles away.
It is incumbent on any
historian who wants to dispute a theory about the Jesus tomb to provide
some other explanation for the Talpiot tomb. Clearly it is an important
tomb, and it may be a Christian one. It would be interesting to know about
the Greek inscriptions on the ossuaries or at least in the adjacent tomb
which are pictured in the book The Jesus Family Tomb. Since they are
in Greek it suggests to me they are not from early Aramaic speaking
followers of Jesus, but they could be from later Christian ones, after the
profile of who was Christian had broadened considerably with many Gentile
Godfearers as converts even within
Israel. It is therefore my tentative
suggestion that the Talpiot tomb may well be an early Jewish tomb not
connected with the followers of Jesus, but it could also be an early
Christian tomb from a generation subsequent to the time of Jesus. And what
we know about those Christians is that they related to each other as
family, even when they were not physically related, and were in some cases
buried together, not in clan tombs, because their religious families were
more important to them than their physical ones. This tomb may reflect that
later Christian practice and reality. It would be nice if the other
ossuaries from the Talpiot tomb could be
DNA
tested so we could find out if any of the folks in this tomb were
related. We do not know. But it would not surprise me if none of them
were. The practice of osslegium, or burial in ossuaries, continued on
after A.D. 70 until the Bar Kokhba revolt at least. There is no reason why
this Talpiot tomb might not reflect the period between A.D. 70 and 125 or
so.
ADDENDUM FROM PROF. RICHARD BAUCKHAM
Here is some additional
data from Richard Bauckham on the names on the so-called 'Mary Magdalene'
ossuary. He is more of an expert in early Jewish names than I am.
"The form of the name on the ossuary in question is Mariamenou. This is a
Greek genitive case, used to indicate that the ossuary belongs to Mary (it
means 'Mary's' or 'belonging to Mary'). The nominative would be Mariamenon.
Mariamenon is a diminutive form, used as a form of endearment. The neuter
gender is normal in diminutives used for women.
This
diminutive, Mariamenon, would seem to have been formed from the name
Mariamene, a name which is attested twice elsewhere (in the Babatha archive
and in the Jewish catacombs at Beth She’arim). It is an unusual variant of
Mariame. In the Babatha document it is spelt with a long e in the
penultimate syllable, but in the Bet She’arim inscription the penultimate
syllable has a short e. This latter form could readily be contracted to the
form Mariamne, which is found, uniquely, in the Acts of Philip.
So we
have, on the one hand, a woman known by the diminutive Mariamenon, in the
ossuary, and, on the other hand, Mary Magdalen, who is always called in the
Greek of the New Testament Maria but seems to be called in a much later
source Mariamne. Going by the names alone they could be the same woman, but
the argument for this is tenuous.
A final
point about the Mariamenou inscription. The inscription also has a second
name Mara. When Rahmani published this inscription in his catalogue of
ossuaries he conjectured that the Greek particle ‘e’ (meaning ‘or’) should
be supplied between the two names, making them alternative names for the
same woman. The ‘e’ is not actually in the inscription, nor is there space
for it between the two names. It is better to suppose that the bones of two
women (or perhaps a woman and her child, the diminutive Mariamenon being
used for the latter) were placed in the same ossuary (this would not be not
unusual). The name Mara is known to have been used as an abbreviation of
the name Martha. The programme makers take it to be the Aramaic word for
‘master,’ but this is implausible in the context. Beside the name
Mariamenou on an ossuary, one would expect Mara to be a name, and since it
is attested as a name this is the obviously correct reading."
I
concur with this conclusion having now looked closely at the inscription on
this particular ossuary. There is no word 'or' in the inscription, in fact
there is a slash line separating the first name from the name Mara
indicating we are most likely dealing with two different people. Prof.
Bauckham has suggested to me that since these are all attested and some are
very common Jewish names, that it is more probable this is a Jewish tomb
but with no connection to Jesus of Nazareth. This may be so.
Blog entry written by Bill Witherington
|
share this page with a
friend |
|