Overlooked inscription found on an ossuary inside the controversial
'Resurrection Tomb' is deciphered, supporting the suggestion that the tomb may
be early Christian.
Following
the recent announcement of the discovery of the earliest known Christian imagery
in the exploration of a sealed first century Jerusalem tomb, controversy
predictably erupted, with numerous members of the community of biblical scholars
offering alternate interpretations of the iconography and disputing the tomb's
claimed Christian connections.
Now, the exploration team has announced a
previously unnoticed but highly specific detail that appears to confirm the
original interpretation of the inscribed images. James H. Charlesworth of
Princeton Theological Seminary has announced the identification and deciphering
of a previously overlooked four letter inscription written in ancient Hebrew on
the controversial "Jonah" ossuary. The inscription appears to spell out the name
"Jonah" in Hebrew.
The first century CE tomb in the Jerusalem
suburb of Talpiot, now two meters under a condominium building, was explored
through the use of robot cameras. The associated images and their controversial
interpretation were announced on February 28, 2012.
The expedition, carried out in 2010-2011, was
directed by historian James D. Tabor of the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte and archaeologist Rami Arav of the University of Nebraska at Omaha,
funded by the Discovery Channel, and is the subject of a documentary produced by
filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici that aired on the Discover Channel on April
12.
Among the robotic exploration's more
controversial finds was an ossuary or "bone box" with an engraving of what the
team identified as "Jonah and the fish," a symbol associated with the earliest
Jewish followers of Jesus in Jerusalem. If correct, this interpretation would
make the ossuary engraving the earliest Christian art ever found as well as the
first archaeological evidence related to faith in Jesus'
resurrection.
The image of Jonah and the fish was used by
later early Christian groups as a symbol of Christ and his resurrection, based
on a reference by Jesus to Jonah in a passage in the gospel of Matthew
(12:39-40). The Jonah "sign" became the quintessential expression of Christian
resurrection faith in later centuries with over a hundred examples of Jonah
images in the Christian catacombs at Rome.
The discovery of a Jonah image in first
century Jerusalem tomb—a type of tomb that went out of use in 70 CE when the
Romans destroyed the city—was a surprise and predictably controversial. Various
scholars have disputed the Jonah identification insisting that the image is more
likely a funerary monument or an amphora-like vase of some type and not a fish
at all.
After the February announcement of the
exploration's results, the team continued to examine the photographs of the
engraving. In puzzling over cryptic marks on the fish's head they noticed what
appeared to be Hebrew script inside the design. Charlesworth, being an expert in
Hebrew script of the period, was called upon to analyze the markings.
Charlesworth's discovery appears to confirm
the original interpretation of the team. It appears that the lines the team
originally interpreted as representing the stick figure in the mouth of the fish
also form four cryptic Hebrew letters (in the Hebrew script familiar from the
Dead Sea Scrolls): Yod, Vav, Nun, Heh, spelling out (from right to left) Y O N H
or YONAH—the Hebrew name of the prophet Jonah. The inscription is engraved in
letters less than 4 centimeters in height—too deep to have been natural
scratches in the stone, too intricate in shape to be random marks by the
engraver.
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/march-2012/article/inscription-appears-to-confirm-sign-of-jonah-on-jerusalem-tomb-ossuary
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