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Opinion: A Titanic blow to Christian faith?

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When I first heard (out of one ear cocked to the TV news) that “Titanic” director James Cameron had had produced a documentary about a purported “lost tomb of Jesus,” I visualized Leo DiCaprio standing on a mausoleum shouting, “I am the king of the Jews.” An Associated Press story about the documentary doesn’t incline me to take this ”bombshell” any more seriously, though I suppose I’ll watch the program.

At the center of this supposed “shock horror” story for Christians is the discovery in a Jerusalem suburb 27 years ago of ossuaries (bone boxes) labeled with the names of “Yeshua bar Yosef” (Jesus son of Joseph) and “Maria” (Mary). There is also an ossuary for “Yehuda bar Yeshua” (Judah, son of Jesus).) Apparently the documentary leaps, “Da Vinci Code” style, to the hypothesis that here we have a reference to the remains of a married Jesus, his wife and his son. The Catholic League is suitably offended.

As a sometime religion writer, I am bracing myself for the same sort of theologically illiterate coverage that attended the “Da Vinci Code” sensation.

Two cautionary points:

1) Although you never would have known it from the nuns who taught me at Sacred Heart School in Pittsburgh, Yeshua (an Aramaic variation ofr Joshua) was a common name. Don’t take my word for it. In his classic study of Jesus, “A Marginal Jew,” the Catholic scripture scholar Father John Meier writes: “It is hard for Christians today to appreciate that Jesus of Nazareth did not stand out in his contemporaries’ minds because of his name.”

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2) The notion that Jesus might have been married is not the conversation-stopper (or scandal to Christian faith) that it might seem. Meier concludes that “we cannot be absolutely sure whether or not Jesus was married,” but thinks the more probably hypothesis is that he was not and remained celibate for religious reasons.

As with “The Da Vinci Code,” it may be that public interest in Cameron’s documentary will steer viewers toward serious books about Jesus – or even a novel like “Gospel” by Wilton Barnhardt, an erudite and entertaining thriller that does double duty as a primer on the Bible, Christian doctrine and the history of heresy. James Cameron should consider adapting it as a film.

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