There is plenty of circumstantial evidence for;
1 Jesus been married to Mary. It was also virtually mandatory for him in his culture.
2 Jesus was also better connected than otherwise claimed conforming to him been a legitimate potential candidate to the throne of Israel.
3 Jesus experienced an exceptional training to be a spiritual leader that is now becoming much more apparent.
Thus the existence of such a text is plausible and that other such texts were eliminated later is also plausible. Thus we can rule out complete impossibility. That leaves the outright issue of validity down to forensics. This then is a predictable discovery and that does easily open the door to forgery.
The innovation here is the substitution of proper names in the text by the writer in order to obscure their meaning. That makes is completely unprovable but definitely suggestive. We have a powerful and plausible claim and the smoking gun happens to be unloaded. At least scholars will be paying attention to this and other texts were the same trick could well be have used..
The book that claims Jesus had a wife and kids — and the embattled author behind it
The
authors want to talk about Christ. They want you to know that, buried
beneath centuries of misinformation and conspiracy, Jesus had a secret
wife, named Mary Magdalene, and he fathered two children with her. And
they want you to know that their book on the matter, named the “Lost
Gospel,” is on sale soon for $21.74. “If true,” reported the
Daily Mail in an overheated dispatch, “this would make it the greatest
revelation into the life of Jesus in nearly 2,000 years.”
Indeed. If true. But is this just the latest theory of an embattled theologian?
Rekindling
one of the Jesus Christ’s greatest mysteries, a la “The Da Vinci Code,”
the new book draws from a 1,500-year-old Aramaic-language manuscript
found inside the British Library. There, the authors say, the secrets of
Jesus’s family life have been in plain sight for more than a century.
“What the Vatican feared — and what ["Da Vinci Code" author] Dan Brown only suspected — has come true,” begins the book, authored by York University (Canada) professor Barrie Wilson and documentarian Simcha Jacobovici.
“There
is now written evidence that Jesus was married to Mary the Magdalene
and that they had children together…. Gathering dust in the British
Library is a document that takes us into the missing years of Jesus’s
life…. According to the document that we uncovered, sometime during this
period he became engaged, got married, had sexual relations, and
produced children. Before anyone gets his/her theological back up, keep
in mind that we are not attacking anyone’s theology. We are reporting on
text.”
The text in question is called the Ecclesiastical History
of Zacharias Rhetor, written on treated animal skin, which was brought
to the United Kingdom in 1847 when the British Museum bought it from an
Egyptian monastery. Scholars scrutinized the document and discarded it
as insignificant.
Then, years ago, Wilson and Jacobovici gave it a look and began to suspect otherwise. The Sunday Times quoted Wilson
describing it as an “ancient Syriac manuscript lurking in the British
Museum…. Scholars have known about it for almost 200 years, but have not
known what to make of it.”
But
these authors, who are expected to answer questions on Wednesday at the
British Library, did. They claim the meaning of the text had been
shrouded in code and “embedded meaning.”
It speaks of a figure named Joseph, who apparently bore striking
similarities to Jesus. He was depicted as “savior-figure,” the book said.
“Joseph, like Jesus, was assumed dead and turned up alive; he too had
humble beginnings and ended up a king of sorts.” So they contend Joseph
was really Jesus in the text.
And this Joseph, they said, had a
wife named Aseneth, whom they purport represented Mary Magdalene. “Put
simply, in order to convey the stature of Aseneth — perhaps Mary the
Magdalene — to his audience, the unknown author of our manuscript
selected a dominant image … he could be sure his readers would readily
understand.”
The book’s purported findings, however, tell only
part of the story. Jacobovici, widely known in the theological
community, has already come under criticism
for pursuing theories of early Christianity that many scholars have
dismissed. The controversy is a subplot to the grander drama surrounding
the study of Jesus’s life, illustrating the tug-and-pull between
popular interest, entrenched doctrine, the potential for big payouts and
the limits of academic inquiry.
In 2002, Jacobovici, a Canadian filmmaker who studies biblical archaeology, pushed out
a documentary that hailed a seemingly pivotal relic called the James
ossuary, which allegedly showed that Jesus had a family. It was later named
one of the top 10 scientific hoaxes of all time by the Discovery
Channel, and its owner was indicted on charges of forgery.
Archaeologists from Israel to the United States denounced the ossuary as
a hoax.
“It’s a publicity stunt, and it will make these guys very rich,” University of Arizona archaeologist William G. Dever told The
Washington Post in 2007. “And it will upset millions of innocent people
because they don’t know enough to separate fact from fiction.”
Jacobovici
went on to author other works that were called out for veering into
untruth. One imbroglio spilled over into the courts, with Jacobovici
suing a critic for libel. Jacobovici fumed in an interview
with Time: He “crossed the line from fair comment to outright libel.
Specifically, he has accused me repeatedly — verbally and in writing —
of ‘forging archaeology.’”
Then a group of academics from Duke University to Columbia University to Tel Aviv University wrote
a joint letter in 2008 that cast suspicion on his work involving the
Talpiot tomb, which Jacobovici claimed showed Jesus had a family. The
letter, signed by 17 academics, called Jacobovici’s work “controversial”
and disputed his assessment that one archaeologist’s widow had “vindicated” his claims about the relics.
“We wish to protest the misrepresentation of the conference proceedings in the media,” the letter said.
“And make it clear that the majority of scholars … either reject the
identification of the Talpiot tomb as belonging to Jesus’s family or
find this claim highly speculative.”
So what about this most recent one?
“It sounds like the deepest bilge,” Diarmaid MacCulloch, an Oxford University professor told the Sunday Times. “I’m very surprised that the British Library gives these authors houseroom.”
1 comment:
Yep. That Jesus fella was a clever trickster all right. Even had his followers duped. Shame on him for allowing them to die for a lie.
Yawn. This sort of rot has been around for so long it's gotten tiresome. But it sells books and makes sites like this think they are leading the pack in new discovery.
Of course I'll be excoriated for saying this, but it's the price one must pay.
Post a Comment