I'm more interested in hearing how evidenced-based reasoning led you both to Christianity AND disbelief in Cameron's claim.
I'll pass on explaining my faith position till I have more time. Problems with the tomb holds 'that' Jesus hypothesis...
many hundreds if not thousands of ossuaries have been found, in many many cave tombs in Jerusalem. This one, found in 1980, is probably 1st century - right period. So what might we expect?
I think it entirely possible that there is the body of a Jesus and the other named folks in a tomb - they are all very common names of the period. If I found the bodies of a John Paul and George, it would be dangerous to jump to any conclusions -- a Ringo and maybe i would have a case. The claim this is 'that' Jesus is based on a combination of names, significant in the New Testament, and which one chap has claimed the odds of occurring together by chance are 600 to 1 against - so it's overwhelmingly likely to be 'that' Jesus's tomb.
OK, so it's a family tomb - and we would expect to find Jesus' known family, including his named brothers in it. We can name Jesus brothers from the Bible, and his uncle, though his sisters names are not known.
If you are rusty on Jesus' family tree, here goes --
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/jesus/tree.html
Now the Bible could well be wrong - but if so the naming case falls apart anyway. So the name we might expect - Joseph, Mary, Jesus, James, Joses, Simeon, Jude, and perhaps Mary, Cleopas and Simeon -- all known relatives.
And what do we get?
Five of the 10 discovered boxes in the Talpiot tomb were inscribed with names believed to be associated with key figures in the New Testament: Jesus, Mary, Matthew, Joseph and Mary Magdalene. A sixth inscription, written in Aramaic, translates to "Judah Son of Jesus."
So Matthew is said to be the disciple Matthew - why buried in the tomb? And two Marys - so one is conveniently claimed to be the Magdalene, alleged to be Jesus' wife. So what we have is not names which correspond with the known family of Jesus, but which do fall in to the set - "people who are mentioned in the NT"
The names are all common - and many have several forms - the second Mary is actually a Miriam - well Mary is Miriam. And the name Jesus for example is not uncommon - 17 Jesus exist in the historical record for this period, and then we get in to the variants - Hosea, Hoshea, Jehoshua, Jeshua, Jeshuah, Jesus, Osea, Oshea are all suggested as readings for this name on one site I looked at. Probably not our man then, especially as i have seen no claims the body had been crucified, and if the Gospels have any truth I think the Romans and Jewish critics like Saul (later Paul) might have dismissed the Resurrection pretty quickly if Jesus had been buried in the family tomb -- a bit of an open and shut case?
So on the whole i think its rather unlikely, and can't figure the 600 to 1 claim - sure they might be the odds of these names all coming together i suppose, assuming one of them is rare, but that in itself is utterly useless if they are not the names which should be there. How many combinations might replacing Matthew with each of the other 11 disciples (12 if oyu count Judas) manage? How rare would they be?
Amusing, but, sorry...
cj x