By
Bruce Chilton
Bernard Iddings Bell Professor of Religion
Bard College
September 2003
This
summer saw a sad chapter unfold in the story of “the Ossuary of James.” Events
disappointed not only those who had hoped this artifact might be
authenticated, but everyone who wants to see public scholarship in the field
of religion pursued at an appropriate standard.
Because the owner of the ossuary never specified where it was discovered and
how precisely he acquired it, the possibility of forgery could not be excluded
when the publicity campaign on behalf of the inscription’s authenticity was
launched last autumn. The Biblical Archaeology Society and several prominent
scholars, some of them expert in epigraphy and some not, tried to talk their
way around this problem. Their enthusiasm got to the point, as I have
mentioned before, that a few of them tried to deny that there were
inconsistencies in the style of the inscription, that the patina on the
ossuary seemed thick, and that for a Christian ossuary to call James “the
brother of Jesus” and not “brother of the Lord Jesus” seemed odd. But the
principal problem remained that any object whose provenience is unknown can’t
be authenticated. The damage to the ossuary inflicted en route between Israel
and the Royal Ontario Museum did nothing to encourage confidence in the
professionalism of those concerned. Still, advocates of the ossuary enjoyed
prominent media coverage. Perhaps that made them incautious in their
judgments.
In any
case, an investigating panel of the Israel Antiquities Authority reported in
June that the patina inside the inscription itself did not correspond to the
patina around the inscription. In effect, it appeared that the lettering had
been cut through the weathering of the stone. In July the owner was arrested
for fraud. Under the legal powers of the Israel Antiquities Authority, his
residence and storage facility had been searched, and several ossuaries were
discovered, as well as equipment for engraving, stencils of ancient letters,
and dirt from excavations. In a bizarre twist, the “Ossuary of James” was
found on a board atop a toilet. One headline writer could not resist referring
to its being “de-throned.”
The
story of this piece as told by its owner and its apologists has been baroque
since the first day. Now it has become sordid. There is no more reason to
pre-judge a legal matter than there was to pre-judge the question of
authenticity before the necessary data were in. But for the time being, “the
Ossuary of James” can no more feature in discussion of the New Testament than
the skull of “Piltdown Man” can be cited in a course on human evolution.
The
arrest of the owner was reported at the time by the Associated Press, but the
popular media in this country – the same media that beat the drum for the
authenticity of the piece – mostly let the story pass. How convenient for
them. Their new-found reticence permits them to evade the issue of their own
credibility in being taken over by a publicity campaign.
Major
organizations for reporting news have left a huge misimpression in the minds
of the majority of their readers and viewers. Would they do the same if a
politician they had backed was shown to have lied about his qualifications?
Why is it acceptable to let suspect information stand in regard to religion,
but not politics? This is where I am especially disappointed: the fourth
estate still tends to treat religion as a matter of whatever people feel like
believing.
In
this, journalists understand neither religion nor their own function. A story
that is not followed up is just gossip, not news, and unsubstantiated rumor is
the stuff of superstition, not faith. Until we can speak about religion
openly, clearly, and on the basis of specifiable and specified evidence, our
culture will remain at an immature stage where it concerns dealing with
impulses and actions that derive from faith.
Because that is the case, I am disappointed most of all by the silence of
religions organizations -- and of professional societies dedicated to the
study of the New Testament. Could they find no words to protest the ethical
and scholarly and journalistic sloppiness involved in this fiasco? The Society
of Biblical Literature sponsored discussions about the ossuary that claimed
its authenticity, but never took a stand. The Royal Ontario Museum has
prevaricated over the findings of the Israel Antiquities Authority, evidently
embarrassed by its own haste in the embracing the genuineness of the piece.
Only the Antiquities Authority seems to have done its job.
Just
after the arrest of the owner, I was dining in Cologne at a conference of the
Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas, at the invitation of the Archbishop of
Cologne. During his speech before dinner, the Archbishop mentioned that the
medieval cathedral had been dedicated to house the remains of the three wise
men of Matthew’s Gospel. In his formal reply, the president of our society,
not normally known to joke a great deal, observed that, while many of our
members might dispute the identity of the bones in the cathedral, at least
they had a better claim to authenticity than “the Ossuary of James.”
It is
good when scholars can laugh a controversy into a healthy perspective, but I
hope to see a time when that is not the preserve of scholars alone. One
function of the Institute of Advanced Theology is to enable all those
interested mining the sources of religion to distinguish fool’s gold from the
real thing. Then we will all have the last laugh.
Look
for academic tools and books for biblical studies at Dove
Books.
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