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By
Bruce Chilton
Bernard Iddings Bell, Professor of Religion
Bard College
April 2003
Last
November, members of the Institute of Advanced Theology at Bard College joined
me in a discussion with Professor John Painter from John Sturt University
College in Australia. We all saw detailed photographs of the ossuary recently
claimed as that of James, Jesus' brother. A few days after our session in
Annandale I traveled to Toronto to view the artifact with several other
scholars who have been involved in the analysis of the piece. This
consultation was facilitated by the generous hospitality of Hershel Shanks of
the Biblical Archaeology Society, who also gave the Institute access to the
photographs.
Press
coverage of the artifact up until November had been so enthusiastic that it
sometimes appeared uncritical. As I said in November, if you do not know where
an artifact has come from, it is not really an archaeological discovery at all
-- but only an item on the collectors' market. Context alone can explain what
precisely an artifact was used for, the conditions it has been submitted to,
its meaning for the people who deposited it, and the chain of possession that
reaches from its deposit to its possession by the current owner. All those
considerations are involved in the issue of authenticity, and many of them are
more interesting than whether or not a given object is a forgery.
That
means that whoever took this piece from its cave (if that is where it was
found) not only looted the ossuary itself but also looted our knowledge of
what the ossuary really means. We cannot completely remove the possibility we
are dealing with a forgery (however improbable that may seem) until we can say
where it came from. I still believe that the best service any scholar can
perform in this controversy is to convince the owner, Mr. Oded Golan, and the
Israeli Antiquities Authority to work together to identify where precisely (in
Jerusalem, presumably) this object comes from. Success may seem a remote
prospect, but all the major players are apparently alive, and we must keep in
mind that they can tell us things we will never know unless they divulge what
they know.
During
the meeting in Toronto, the skeptics had a very good run. They emphasized our
lack of knowledge of the provenance of the piece in order to cast doubt on the
integrity of the owner and of the whole Biblical Archaeology Society. Some
press coverage turned around on a dime, making the transition from credulous
to hypercritical from one day to the next. The damage the box has sustained
has not helped anyone's cause: let's hope thoughtless handling that has
scrubbed, gouged, and cracked the thing will finally cease.
One
factor was open up by the controversy that might help future discussion. I
mentioned during the talk with Professor Painter that the changing shapes of
some of the letters, as you read through the inscription, disturbed me.
Rochelle Altman has argued that the changes attest two completely different
hands. That started the scholarly equivalent of a shouting match.
One
side shouts "fraud." Meanwhile, some scholars in Toronto who had not noticed
the alteration of the shapes of letters until it was pointed out to them still
insisted the inscription is from a single hand. One senior epigraphist who
just hates to change his mind kept repeating that the carver must have gotten
tired. That argument is obviously lame, but both sides should take a deep
breath. (Maybe that will make them sound less like Bill O'Reilly.) A change in
style does not prove fraud. Grave markers are subject to emendation over time
as you can see from visiting many family tombs from antiquity until today.
"James, son of Joseph," might have been inscribed when James' bones were put
in the box, and "the brother of Jesus" could have been added later. It is
worth remembering that the first historian of Christianity, Hegesippus, refers
to a monument being set up for James in Jerusalem. Was this bone box part of
the memorial built-in above or below ground? That is the kind of question that
should be asked alongside the obvious ones: is the ossuary genuine? Is it a
fake?
And
unless this is a fake, it is either the original ossuary of James or part of a
monument to him. It could also be both. However you look at it, that makes this
artifact evidence of the earliest identifiable Christian gravesite - and until
we find out where the piece came from, we will be unable to say where that is.
Anomalies remain, on any reading. Why is the reference simply to "Jesus," when
the titles "Messiah," "Son of Man," and "Lord" were applied to him in Aramaic
from a very early period? There, too, we are up against a wall of uncertainty,
until someone lets us into the place where the ossuary was found.
Look
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