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This is based on New Faith-Building Discovery in Israel
Welcome to another broadcast of ComfortForToday.com. We trust you are enjoying these broadcasts.
Today's message is focused on the recent newspaper articles, radio and television reports of the 2,000-year-old burial box of one called "James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus" which has been found in Israel. This great find as reported in Christianity Today is available on my website ComfortForToday.Com in written and audio format. I shall read this, along with my own comments, then consider how the finding of this box is just another sign that Jesus' return is near. Afterwards, we shall see what James wrote for us in the first chapter of his book of the same name.
The following article, written by Gordon Govier, was published in Christianity Today and posted October 21, 2002 on their website:
SCHOLARS LINK FIRST-CENTURY BONE-BOX TO "JAMES, SON OF JOSEPH, BROTHER OF JESUS."
Pilgrims who travel to Israel to walk where Jesus walked may soon
have something new to connect them with the life and ministry of
Jesus Christ.
Scholars have recently examined a box carved out of soft limestone,
made to hold the bones of a first-century Jew. On its side is carved
an Aramaic inscription, "James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus."
The bone box, known as an ossuary, is in the hands of a private
collector in Jerusalem. But its existence, revealed in a news
conference today in Washington, D.C., has already generated a buzz
among archaeologists and biblical scholars.
The news conference was convened by Biblical Archaeological Review,
which reports "an archaeological landmark" in its November-December
issue. The ossuary was not uncovered in an archaeological excavation,
but apparently surfaced on the antiquities market. This means that
potentially important evidence for evaluating the box is missing.
But experts consulted by BAR and Christianity Today seem satisfied
that it really is a 2,000-year old artifact. BAR editor Hershel Shanks
asked for an analysis by the Geological Survey of Israel. Retired
Wheaton College professor John McRay, author of Archeology and the
New Testament, says the survey's lab report was convincing.
"Six different pieces of the patina of the stone were looked at
through that laboratory," he said. "It was verified, by people who
are not Christians, that the date on this is first century and there
is no evidence of recent disturbances of the box."
"I have no question it is an ancient artifact from the first century," said Eric Meyers, the Bernice and Morton Lerner Professor of Judaic Studies and Director of the Graduate Program in Religion at Duke
University. "It appears to be the oldest extra-biblical, non-literary
mention of Jesus in the context of the nascent Christian church, and
that's pretty significant."
Archaeological looting
Jews used ossuaries in their burial caves for a relatively short
period in the first century. But archaeologists have found hundreds
in recent years, including one that probably belonged to the high
priest Caiaphas mentioned in the Gospels. Some have even been found
inscribed with the name Yeshua (Jesus/Joshua) or with the inscription
"James, the son of Joseph."
But could this ossuary really belong to the brother of Jesus of
Nazareth? "You have to remember that the three names mentioned are
equivalent to Tom, Dick, and Harry," says Meyers.
"They're everyday sort of names in the first century. What is most
compelling to me is the use of 'brother of.' We don't have the
designation of siblings common in the epigraphy of the Second Temple
or early Roman period. That's kind of a clincher for me."
Meyers is an archaeologist who has excavated a number of sites in
Israel. And even while marveling at this development, he cannot hide
his repugnance at having to comment on a discovery of unknown
provenance. "There was a whole tomb that was looted and this has been
sold on the black market," he charges. "We're missing all of the rest
of the stuff that could have filled in the blanks. That's very sad and
that's why we don't want to encourage archaeological looting and this
sort of activity."
Implications for Catholic doctrines
Ben Witherington, professor of New Testament at Asbury Theological
Seminary, believes that the bones stayed in the ossuary for a very
short time. Noting that first-century Christians fled Jerusalem
shortly before the Romans destroyed it in A.D. 70, Witherington thinks
they took James' remains with them. "It's not likely they would take
the ossuary with them, it's too heavy," he says. "They would probably
have taken the bones because they wouldn't have wanted his grave to
have been desecrated by Romans."
Witherington is intrigued as much by the beautiful Aramaic lettering
of the inscription as by what it says. Handwriting analysis also helps
date the ossuary to around A.D. 62, the traditional date of
James' death.
"It certainly supports the view that Aramaic was still very much a
living language amongst early Jews, including some of the followers
of Jesus," he adds. He also sees implications for some Catholic
doctrines in this discovery, especially the perpetual virginity of
Mary.
"The dominant Catholic tradition is that the brothers of Jesus are
actually cousins because Mary didn't have any more children, or they
were step brothers in that they were Joseph's sons by a previous
marriage," he said. "This inscription could call into question that
doctrine."
Most Protestant scholars believe James was a younger brother of Jesus (one of four mentioned in Matthew 13:55 and not to be confused with the apostles), James the brother of John, or James the son of Alphaeus. James doesn't appear to have followed Jesus while he was alive, but Paul, in 1 Corinthians 15:7, mentions that Jesus appeared to James after the resurrection. James then became the leader of the Jerusalem church.
Acts 15 records that James rendered judgment at a church council that met to adjudicate issues raised by Paul and Barnabas. He was also
probably the author of the New Testament book that bears his name.
The first-century Jewish historian Josephus says that around A.D. 62
the high priest Ananus arranged for the death of "one James, the
brother of Jesus who was called the Christ/Messiah."
An important discovery
BAR editor Hershel Shanks told CT the ossuary had been in the private collection of an Israeli citizen for about 15 years. "I asked the owner why he didn't recognize it. He said, 'I never thought that the Son of God could have a brother."
Shanks became aware of its existence in June after the owner contacted
French epigrapher Andre LeMaire to evaluate it for him. The owner "got
it from an Arab antiquities dealer," he said. "He only paid a few
hundred dollars for it. The antiquities dealer told him it was found
in the section of Jerusalem called Silwan, just south of the Mount of
Olives. It's an area that's pockmarked with burial caves. Some people
have their basements in ancient burial caves."
McRay said he had anticipated a discovery like this when he wrote his
book a few years ago. "Two thousand years have passed and you would
expect something like this to be there. It could be, probably, the
most significant archaeological discovery of this generation." Shanks
calls it "the most important find in the history of New Testament
archaeology."
"We're making arrangements right now to have it exhibited in North
America," Shanks adds. "Next month there are 8,000 biblical scholars
meeting in Toronto at their annual meeting. We'd like it to be there."
After that, he's not sure what will happen with the ossuary."
SUMMARY:
It seems God has kept this box hidden for a time in history when unbelief would be rampant. You see, scholars are convinced that inside the box indeed do lie the bones of "James, son of Joseph, the brother of Jesus" as the Aramaic inscription on the box reads.
Below are a few notes about the box, what the Bible says about the man James, and what the historian Josephus wrote about him.
1. Matthew 13:55 and Mark 6:3 identify a man James as the brother of Jesus.
2. It was not a practice at that time to include names of brothers or sisters on burial inscriptions.
3. Acts 1:14 tells us that James was among the group gathered at Pentecost (the day the Christian church was born).
4. Galatians 1:18-19 tells us that when the Apostle Paul went up to Jerusalem to talk to Peter he said, "I saw none of the other apostles except JAMES, THE LORD'S BROTHER."
5. Acts 12:17 tells us that this is the James who presided over the Christian council in Jerusalem - a group of leaders who assisted the early churches resolve controversial issues.
6. In the Book of Acts, chapter 15, we can read what James actually told these leaders.
7. As mentioned in the article, we have proof other than the Bible that James was indeed the brother of Jesus Christ/Messiah. This proof was written by the historian Josephus in "Jewish Antiquities" A.D.62 as recorded in a book "Josephus, The Essential Writings" - a translation by Paul L. Maier:
Josephus wrote:
"Ananus...convening the judges of the Sanhedrin, BROUGHT BEFORE THEM A MAN NAMED JAMES, THE BROTHER OF JESUS WHO WAS CALLED THE CHRIST, and certain others. He accused them of having transgressed the law, and condemned them to be stoned to death."
Josephus wrote this in A.D.62 - the year James is said to have died.
So James was a very real person both in the biblical and historical records, as was Jesus Christ.
James wrote the Book bearing his name.
In the very first chapter, James gives advice very much needed in our day.
First, we are to "count it all joy" when we "fall into various trials."
Joy? All I hear is complaining about trials or blaming them on the devil..
Second, we are to pray for wisdom if anyone lacks it. But we all think we have it, therefore we reason we don't need to pray for it!
Third, we look up to the rich. We forget that the poorest may be highly exalted in God's sight, and even the rich will die like everyone else!
So the bone-box changes our perspective from earthly to heavenly matters.
Let us now listen to part of a song on CD Vol. II "Watchmen on the Gates of Jerusalem" by Beit Avinu Worship Team as recorded by Progressive Vision International, Box 31393, 91313 Jerusalem.