RonSceptic
Muse
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2001
- Messages
- 514
Kimpatsu said:
John, James, Joseph, Jesus and Judas were the most common names in Arimathea at the time.
HTH.
Prof Lemaire of Sorbonne University(apparently the worlds leading authority Aramaic and Hebrew inscriptions) is quoted as stating that James, Joseph and Jesus were quite common in 1st century Judea. Of 233 ossuaries from the period found to date, 19 mention a Joseph, 10 a Jesus, and 5 a James.
Lemaire has calculated that, assuming each man had an average of two bothers, a total of 0.05% of the population would have fitted the ctireria 'James, son of Joseph, brother of Jesus'. Given that there were around 40,000 males in Jerusalem in the mid 60's AD, that would mean around 20 men fitting the criteria.
So even if the box is genuine, it would still not be proof of the existence of Jesus Christ.