Implications
of the Jesus Family Tomb
at Talpiot
O. K., you’ve seen the DVD of the Discovery Channel program
on the Jesus family tomb found at Talpiot. Perhaps you’ve
even read the book The Jesus Family Tomb
co-authored by Simon Jacobovici and Charles Pellegrino. But, you’ve
done a Google Search and found out that almost no one else likes
the idea that the Talpiot tomb -- with references to Jesus, Joseph,
Mary, Mariamne, Matthew, and Jose -- is indeed the tomb of the Jesus,
the presumed founder and Messiah of the world’s largest religion.
Despite all the negative verbiage thrown in the general direction
of this thesis, no one has come up with a really plausible reason
for rejecting it out of hand. There are two basic counter-arguments
by which opponents have attempted to blow the theory out of the
water: "the Bible tells me so" (dogmatism, in various
degrees of sophistication) and "the names were common"
(true, but ignores the problem of the cluster of names). Rather
than re-hash these arguments (something which has been done very
well by James Tabor and others), I want to ask a different question:
what are the implications if the Talpiot tomb is the tomb of the
historical Jesus? Here’s my take.
No One’s Paying Attention!
The most alarming implication is that almost no one is taking this
thing seriously, including a lot of very intelligent people and
scholars who should probably know better. You don’t even have
to believe that the Talpiot tomb is the tomb of Jesus to see the
problem here; all that is required is that you see that the existence
of the Talpiot tomb raises some basic questions which at the very
least require further investigation.
This is due to a psychological reaction which I would describe
as "shouting down." If someone were speaking at a public
gathering and in response to someone’s fairly specific points,
there emerged from the audience cries of "that’s ridiculous!"
and "who let them in here?" -- we would immediately recognize
this as an attempt to "shout down" and shut out the speaker
from being heard, or their views from being considered. It is a
bit more difficult to see if it happens on the internet, or in the
media, but the basic phenomenon is the same. Several anti-tomb bloggers
express what these scholars probably are feeling but don’t
say in public: "I find it a shamful [sic] waste of time giving
the movie or it’s [sic] context so much attention," "My
concerns with giving a serious response to the ‘Jesus’
Family Tomb’ matter is [sic], firstly, that I feel it lends
legitimacy to something that is totally absurd," etc.
This is, in my opinion, what is happening with respect to the discussion
of the Jesus family tomb. This failure to examine the views of your
opponents and the issues before you, sometimes issues which are
fairly obvious, is alarming because I see it in a wide variety of
other disciplines; it’s not just a peculiarity of Jesus scholarship,
but a general problem in society. For example, it extends to petroleum
geology
("The Jesus Family Tomb -- and Peak Oil") and the
animal rights community ("Is
Honey Vegan?").
Is this how we are going to debate things from now on? What happened
to compassion for your opponents, reason, debate, and things like
that? Failure to see the obvious is, I am afraid, another sign of
the coming collapse of civilization.
Things We Should Have Already Known
The next most important implication of the Jesus family tomb is
that it confirms a number of things that we already know, or should
have known. For one thing, there really was a historical Jesus,
contrary to the "can’t-prove-me-wrong" approach
of some popular writers who have postulated a Jesus myth with no
historical Jesus at all. More importantly, it also confirms that
the family of Jesus held Jesus in high regard, and in fact was probably
the core of his movement. This points towards the Jewish Christian
Ebionites as the true successors of the primitive Christian community,
since they claimed -- apparently without dispute in ancient times
-- to have the relatives of Jesus among their own number.
Spiritual Resurrection
The most startling implication for traditional Christian doctrine
is that it completely overturns the traditional Christian view of
the physical resurrection of Jesus. While this will be "not
news" to a lot of liberal Christian scholars, who have suspected
something like this for a long time, it is big news indeed to most
traditional Christians.
Paul and the Ebionites had a view of a spiritual resurrection:
Jesus still lives, but not in a physical body, rather as some sort
of angelic presence. But the later church viewed this as a heresy,
insisting that Jesus’ resurrection was physical. "Doubting
Thomas" is invited to inspect the nail holes in Jesus’
hands (John 20:27); Jesus says to the amazed disciples, "a
spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have"
(Luke 24:40).
As I recall, in the Discovery Channel show on the Jesus tomb, John
Crossan is quoted as saying that the discovery of a tomb of Jesus
would not be a challenge to Christian faith (presumably, since he
is Catholic, to the idea of a physical resurrection of Jesus). There
is a sense in which Crossan is right. There is no logical reason
why a physical tomb for Jesus could not co-exist with the idea of
a physical resurrection. Jesus could have acquired an entirely new
body created from scratch, and it would be logically possible for
Jesus (in his new body) to see his own former body laying dead on
the ground. Why should we limit what God can or can’t do?
The problem is not the implications for faith (abstractly considered)
but the implications for history. This scenario of a new body alongside
the old dead one is not how the early church framed this issue.
The empty tomb signalled the resurrection: "He has risen, he
is not here; see the place where they laid him" (Mark 16:6
and parallels). The whole point of Pilate guarding the tomb (Matthew
27:64) was so that the disciples would not steal the body away and
claim that Jesus had risen from the dead. The presence of a dead
body, that is, would have demonstrated to them that Jesus was not
physically resurrected. Somehow, the idea arose that if Jesus was
resurrected physically, then it would be using the material from
his old body.
A tomb for Jesus, with bones enclosed, lovingly cared for by his
family, supports the idea that historically the first followers
of Jesus did not believe in or accept this idea of a physical resurrection,
as expressed in the gospels. It shows that Paul and the Ebionites
(at each other’s throats, figuratively speaking, on some other
issues, but in agreement here) had a better understanding of the
experience of the resurrection by Jesus’ first followers,
than did the orthodox church.
Mariamne
While not as disturbing for traditional Christian doctrine, the
most startling implication for modern sensibilities is that Jesus
and Mariamne (presumably the woman known as "Mary Magdalene"
in the New Testament) were married and had a son, Jehuda, who was
buried in the tomb as well. This shatters the traditional view of
Jesus as celibate, elevates the status of Mariamne, and forces us
to re-examine other references to Mariamne or Mary Magdalene in
ancient gospels.
Here is an example of the problems -- and this is a rough sketch,
not a precise catalog. Let’s look at the pseudo-Clementine
literature, by scholarly consensus of Jewish Christian origin. Among
a whole lot of material, there are the following "odd"
views, which are not found in mainstream Christianity.
(A) The resurrection is viewed as a spiritual one, not a physical
one. (Recognitions 3.28, 3.30).
(B) The Homilies, especially, postulate a world in which, in effect,
evil does not exist. (Homilies 19.20; the Homilies are a bit contradictory
on this point, but the drift is clear.) The devil and demons do
not act contrary to God’s law, but act in a sense as God’s
dark agents. Peter hints, though he does not make it explicit, that
even the devil himself may be saved.
(C) Homilies 19.14 even has Peter debating the idea that matter
is eternal.
Turn now to the Gospel of Mary [Mariamne]. What do we find? Spiritual
resurrection, questions as to whether matter is eternal, and a theology
in which in effect, evil does not exist. So what gives? How did
we get from the Recognitions and Homilies to the Gospel of Mary?
Most scholars have viewed these beliefs and concerns as part of
a "gnostic" world-view, and thought of gnosticism as opposed
to Jewish Christianity. Hans-Joachim Schoeps knew about these "gnostic"
views in the Homilies but thought of them as anomalous, perhaps
the product of later syncretism. In fact, I tended towards this
position myself in The Lost Religion of Jesus.
But I have to say that I am now reconsidering this position.
The problem is that the "gnostics" such as Marcion and
the Jewish Christians were opposed. We know this given the vehemence
of the debates between Peter (representing the Ebionites) and Simon
Magus (representing a "gnostic" viewpoint similar to Marcion’s)
in the Recognitions and Homilies. But then, why do the Jewish Christians
sometimes take "gnostic" positions? Is it because gnostic
editors got hold of the Homilies, or because the Jewish Christians
were really gnostic themselves after all, or what?
I think that I (and others) may have misunderstood what gnosticism
was in the first place. Karen King’s book What
is Gnosticism? is helpful in this regard. The phenomenon
often known as "gnosticism," in my revised view, would
not be the viewpoint of the second-century thinkers Marcion and
Valentinus, but would be a "primitive gnosticism" that
would be, essentially, the common ground between Paul, the Ebionites,
and the Mandaeans. That would take us back to -- let’s see
-- John the Baptist!
We would then view the angry disputes between "Peter"
and "Simon Magus" in the pseudo-Clementine literature
as a sort of "family dispute" or "civil war"
among followers of John the Baptist. The Recognitions and Homilies
present the gnostic Simon Magus as a follower of John the Baptist
or Dositheus, one of John’s disciples. Maybe he was -- and
maybe that means that Jesus (who after all was baptized by John)
and "gnosticism" aren’t as widely separated as we
thought, that indeed Peter and Simon Magus are fighting over the
same tradition.
I don’t know how much we can make of this. Ancient writers
and speakers probably didn’t always act with quite the precision
that we expect of them. They did not, that is, propound theory A
which modified ideas B, C, and D, influenced by predecessors E and
F but in opposition to G. Rather, they just said a bunch of things
which sounded good at the time.
BUT, even after considering this, it appears that there is more
of so-called "gnosticism" in both Jewish Christianity,
and among the early followers of John the Baptist (both Christian
and non-Christian), than we may have previously thought. By "gnosticism"
I mean the non-dualistic kind of stuff found in the Gospel of Thomas,
the Gospel of Mary, and other material in the Nag Hammadi library.
Paul and Marcion may have taken this ur-gnosticism in one direction,
Jesus and the Ebionites in another.
The relationship of Jewish Christianity to "gnosticism"
is something I was already re-evaluating before hearing about the
Jesus tomb; but the presence of Mariamne in the Jesus tomb has prompted
me to examine this in even more depth. The Jesus tomb may force
us to look at the gospels and traditions surrounding Mariamne in
conjunction with what else we know about Jewish Christianity.
It is therefore, an urgent and very interesting archeological task
to investigate the whole Talpiot tomb further. I’d like to
see someone address the question, does the "James son of Joseph"
ossuary also belong to the Talpiot tomb, as the patina evidence
indicates? If so, while I await the word of statisticians on this,
it would seem intuitively to me that the case for identifying this
tomb with that of Jesus would become very strong, if not overwhelming.
Keith Akers
September 20, 2007
From www.compassionatespirit.com
Homily on The Feast of the Holy Family by +Mark Aelred
NOTE: Material on this website is copyright (c) by the respective authors.
This article posted here on October 18, 2007.
This page updated March 10, 2014
|