Someone is bound to ask me about "The Tomb of Jesus." Rightly so. It is in the news – even though it is very old speculative news. It deserves and demands a response.

I am going to gather some other people’s responses here since they have already does some good work. From Brian D. Russell’s blog – RealMinistries.org, we have a worthy analysis: The Tomb of Jesus: A Missional Opportunity.

In there, he posits:

"Frankly, I am grateful for such media blitzes that sensationalize finds
such as last year’s Gospel of Judas, Dan Brown’s conspiracy claims in The DaVinci Code,
or the “The Lost Tomb of Jesus”. Whenever the “buzz” offers the
opportunity for conversation about Jesus, we need to learn to take
advantage of such times. Rather than being defensive or quick to debunk
a friend or co-worker, we should listen carefully before speaking. When
we do speak, let us do it with words seasoned with salt and with an
invitation to study the Bible together."

Ben Witherington is blunt from the start in his title: THE JESUS TOMB? ‘TITANIC’ TALPIOT TOMB THEORY SUNK FROM THE START

FIRST-PERSON: Serious scholarship or personal profit?
– Andreas J. Kostenberger, Baptist Press:

WAKE FOREST, N.C. (BP)–As you’ve heard, James
Cameron, director of the blockbuster movie “Titanic,” is out to sink an
even bigger ship — Christianity.

He
claims that Jesus’ bones and those of His mother, brother, "wife," and
a child named Jude were found in ossuaries (bone boxes) in a Jerusalem
tomb. On CNN, Cameron and his collaborator Simcha Jacobovici claimed
they produced the TV documentary simply in an effort to “report the
news” so that people can draw their own conclusion. Yet according to
New Testament scholar Ben Witherington, Jacobovici is a practicing,
orthodox Jew. Are we really to believe that the “revelation” that
Jesus’ bones have been found — hence no bodily resurrection — are of
no religious concern to this man? To me, at least, this one has the
almighty dollar sign written all over it.

Let me list just some
of the most egregious problems with the way in which this find from the
1980s is being interpreted by Cameron and Simcha: READ THE ARTICLE HERE.

Scott McKnight, Jesus Creed, takes this track:

The news story coming out today
that they have found the tomb of Jesus, that Jesus was married to a
woman named Mary (presumed then to be Mary Magdalene), and that they
had a son named Judah, will surely raise all kinds of questions and
problems. I haven’t seen the evidence, but I will be studying what I
can find. Here are my first two questions:

He brings some serious research to the table.

If you want to look at Discovery Channel’s promo, it can be found here: The Lost Tomb of Jesus.

We need to take everything seriously, but this is not a serious threat. It is a nuisance and it will fool people who are inclined to pick up on the pseudo-intellectual fad of the week with regard to the "historical" Jesus. This is old stuff and rather discredited, but it is persistent.

Wouldn’t it be amazing if the church rose up and made in unmistakeably evident by its lifestyle and power that Jesus Christ is alive and at work in the world? We have it within ourselves to make these attempts to sensationalize sloppy scholarship thoroughly irrelevant.

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4 responses to “The Tomb of Jesus.”

  1. Chris Rosebrough Avatar

    I’ve written a comprehensive rebuttal to the films claims. Please read it and decide for youself whether this film’s claims are true or just hype.
    You can read it at extremetheology.com

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  2. Tom Sims Avatar

    Thaks for the link, Chris. It looks very comprehensive.

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  3. Kevin Mote Avatar
    Kevin Mote

    After reading the actual archaeological report of the Taiplot tomb (found here: http://dsc.discovery.com/convergence/tomb/explore/media/tomb_evidence.pdf), and noting the how common the names were in ancient jewish communities, the following exchange occurred to me: JOURNALIST: “We’ve found a gravesite in Dallas with the names John, Jacky, Bobby, and Edward — It MUST be the Kennedy family grave!” OBJECTOR: “Um, it can’t be — Ed Kennedy isn’t dead.” JOURNALIST: “You’ve been led to BELIEVE he isn’t dead. But what are the odds of finding all these graves together? It MUST be the Kennedies!” OBJECTOR:”That’s not how Jackie Kennedy spelled her name.” JOURNALIST:”Well,there was a newspaper article once that spelled it that way. Perhaps it’s a variant.” OBJECTOR:”None of the Kennedies are from Dallas; why would they be born there?” JOURNALIST:”It’s where John died, isn’t it?” OBJECTOR:”Are you sure you’re not insisting on this for reasons other than objective historical research?” JOURNALIST:”What? I am offended that you would insinuate that the millions of dollars from book and movie deals are motivating me to stretch the truth! The money means nothing to me! (By the way, the book is available at all major bookstores.)”

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  4. p Avatar

    Thanks Kevin – That was good. I appreciate the chuckle. – Tom

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