The Remains of Jesus Uncovered!
Regis Nicoll

That’s right! At least according to award winning filmmakers James Cameron and Simcha Jacobovici whose documentary to that effect will be shown later this year on the Discovery Channel among other places.
How did they come across such a sensational find? It all goes back
to the 1980 discovery of a cave in a backwater neighborhood in
Jerusalem in which six coffins were scribbled with the names: Jesua
son of Joseph, Mary, Mary, Matthew, Jofa (Joseph, identified as Jesus’
brother), Judah son of Jesua (Jesus’ son - the filmmakers claim). Then
after DNA analysis and close work with world-famous scientists
Cameron and company concluded that the cave contained Jesus’ remains.
But there several things quite odd about this. First off, the names
Mary, Joseph and Jesus are some of the most common names in early
Palestine. One of my colleagues remarked, It’s like finding a cemetery
plot in Great Britain 100 years from now with tombs bearing the names
of Philip, Elizabeth, Anne and Margaret, and concluding they contain
the remains of the Royal Family. Second, although DNA could establish
the relationships between those in the cave, it is incapable of
identifying any one of them as being Jesus of Nazareth. Third, it fails
to mention anything about crucifixion forensics. Fourth, Amos Kloner
the archaeologist who wrote the official report on the cave ten years
ago concluded,
the "possibility of it being Jesus' family [is] very close to zero.
[and] And Motti Neiger, spokesperson for the Israel Antiquities
Authority, agreed "that chances of these being the actual burials of
the holy family are almost nil."
In fact, if this cave did contain
the remains of Jesus it would be nigh impossible to verify 2000 years
later. That said, in the days, weeks and months after Jesus’s death, it
would have been certain--an important point to keep in mind.
Both the Jewish leadership and the Roman authorities were not
only highly motivated to quash any resurrection ruse, but had the
political muscle and wherewithal to extract confessions and find the
body, if indeed it existed. That no body was ever found is reflected
in the extra-biblical account by the Jewish historian, Josephus, in the
late first century:
Now there was about this time Jesus
[the]
Christ. And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst
us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first
did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive again the third day;
as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other
wonderful things concerning him. And the tribe of Christians, so named
from him, are not extinct at this day. (Antiquities 18.3.3)
Reprinted from crosswalk.com