Jesus wasn't resurrected

:sad2: exactly how does one prove this claim? Has Cameron secured some DNA from God the Father so that he can match it with the remains? Some people will do anything for a buck, and anything to bash Christianity.

Yes, you're right - James Cameron is rubbing his hands with glee at the thought of making a fortune off the Discovery Channel (which I am sure pulls in ad revenues rivaled only by the Super Bowl).

I'll bet he isn't remotely interested in any sort of historical or scholarly research - he has a vendetta against Christians.

I mean, I don't know anything about James Cameron or his theological beliefs, but of course I know that bashing Christianity is his only motivation.

I'm so sure of it, I don't even need to watch the show!
 
Yes, you're right - James Cameron is rubbing his hands with glee at the thought of making a fortune off the Discovery Channel (which I am sure pulls in ad revenues rivaled only by the Super Bowl).

I'll bet he isn't remotely interested in any sort of historical or scholarly research - he has a vendetta against Christians.

I mean, I don't know anything about James Cameron or his theological beliefs, but of course I know that bashing Christianity is his only motivation.

I'm so sure of it, I don't even need to watch the show!

It was reported that their ad time actually surpassed the Super Bowl a couple of years ago.

Our local matress dealership must be selling them faster than we know.
 
Article with Video

Director defends Jesus tomb findings

James Cameron is convinced remains are of those of Christ, family

Oscar-winning director James Cameron's controversial new documentary, which claims that Jesus may not have only been buried with a wife, but a son as well, adds an intriguing new piece but certainly doesn't solve the 2,000-year-old puzzle of the life and death of Christ, the filmmaker said in an exclusive interview on TODAY.

"I'm not an archaeologist. I'm a filmmaker," said Cameron, who won the Academy Award for Best Director in 1998 for Titanic. "I looked at the evidence initially, and as a layman I found it to be compelling ... I haven't seen anything that contradicts the initial hypothesis."

"The Lost Tomb of Jesus," which premiers March 4 on the Discovery Channel, chronicles recent efforts to apply modern science and new understanding of Jesus and his followers to the 1980 discovery of a set of ossuaries, or "bone boxes," under what is now an apartment complex near Jerusalem.

Cameron and investigative journalist Simcha Jacobovici, who wrote a companion book "The Jesus Family Tomb," are defending their work against criticism that they are riding the coattails of Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" and are trying to profit from promoting theories discredited by archaeologists when the limestone boxes were discovered 27 years ago.

Appearing on TODAY on Monday, Cameron and Jacobovici said statisticians who have looked at markings on the bone boxes estimate that the probability that the remains uncovered in 1980 are not those of Joseph, Mary, Jesus, Mary Magdalene, a son of Jesus and other relatives are more than 100 to 1.

"I think people have their specific agendas and their specific kind of knee-jerk reactions, but I think when they see the film and they see how the evidence is presented, then they should comment," said Cameron.

TODAY host Meredith Vieira, who read the book and watched the documentary, said the implications are astounding given that billions of people have been taught that Jesus was resurrected both in spirit and body, ascended to heaven, never married and had no offspring. The film and book, if accepted, could shake the church that Jesus founded to its core.

"If this is correct, what are the implications? They're huge," Vieira said.

"They are huge, but they are not necessarily the implications that people think they are," Jacobovici said. "For example, some people are going to say, ‘This challenges the Resurrection.' I don't know why. If Jesus rose from one tomb, he could have risen from the other tomb."

According to Cameron and Jacobovici, the bones discovered in the limestone boxes in 1980 were quickly reburied, following the Jewish traditions. Archaeologists quickly discounted the theory that the boxes contained the bones of Jesus and his family because the names inscribed on the boxes were quite common in the region during the 1st Century.

Jacobovici said that the archaeologists who were so quick to dismiss the find never asked statisticians for an opinion about the likelihood that boxes inscribed with names like Joseph, Mary and Jesus would all be found in the same place and be dated back to the time that Jesus lived and taught.

"They are common names, these were archaeologists. They never went to statisticians," Jacobovici said. "We're just reporting the news. We're not statisticians. We're not theologians ... Now the debate is going to begin because statisticians say it is significant. DNA experts say it is significant."

"The Lost Tomb of Jesus" airs March 4 on the Discovery Channel at 9 pm ET/8 pm CT.

—John Springer, TODAY contributor
 
It was reported that their ad time actually surpassed the Super Bowl a couple of years ago.

Our local matress dealership must be selling them faster than we know.

Ad time or ad revenue? I doubt the Mattress King is paying a million bucks per thirty second spot. ;)
 

but they show stuff like this all the time,so does the history channel. They had the show about the Gospel of Judas, they did a LOT on the DaVinci code and it hasn't seemed to hurt them any. People who don't want to watch, just don't watch. I like these kind of shows, so I usually do watch.

I love the History Channel, Science Channel, Discovery Channel, etc. a documentery is merely that.

but people are freaking out over this program, and it hasn't even aired. discoverychannel.com has set up a discussion board for it in advance.
 
According to Cameron and Jacobovici, the bones discovered in the limestone boxes in 1980 were quickly reburied, following the Jewish traditions. Archaeologists quickly discounted the theory that the boxes contained the bones of Jesus and his family because the names inscribed on the boxes were quite common in the region during the 1st Century.

Jacobovici said that the archaeologists who were so quick to dismiss the find never asked statisticians for an opinion about the likelihood that boxes inscribed with names like Joseph, Mary and Jesus would all be found in the same place and be dated back to the time that Jesus lived and taught.

"They are common names, these were archaeologists. They never went to statisticians," Jacobovici said. "We're just reporting the news. We're not statisticians. We're not theologians ... Now the debate is going to begin because statisticians say it is significant. DNA experts say it is significant."



I saw them say this on the today this a.m. and have to agree with an earlier post that unless you are willing to look at FACTS and mae your own determination wihtout just saying its nonesense theres no use even replying on this thread and dismissing it
you have to have an open mind with something like this
look at and if you still disagree thats your perpective but to disagree without watching the movie and reading book doesnt make sense
 
:sad2: exactly how does one prove this claim? Has Cameron secured some DNA from God the Father so that he can match it with the remains? Some people will do anything for a buck, and anything to bash Christianity.

this has been all over the news today and i have seen no one bashing at all
i think many will be upset just at the news of this and dismiss it
but i would respectfully disagree
at this point i have seen no bashing
 
then you obviously can't comprehend 'science'.

Oh. Then you better contact the Dean that handed me that Bachelor of Science degree a few years back and tell him he made a mistake - that I really didn't comprehend what I was learning. :rotfl:
 
I love the History Channel, Science Channel, Discovery Channel, etc. a documentery is merely that.

but people are freaking out over this program, and it hasn't even aired. discoverychannel.com has set up a discussion board for it in advance.

It's called advertising. They're getting some nice free publicity on the Today show and all that. People who might not have heard of it before, but now they'll watch because of the controversy.
 
Yes, you're right - James Cameron is rubbing his hands with glee at the thought of making a fortune off the Discovery Channel (which I am sure pulls in ad revenues rivaled only by the Super Bowl).

I'll bet he isn't remotely interested in any sort of historical or scholarly research - he has a vendetta against Christians.

I mean, I don't know anything about James Cameron or his theological beliefs, but of course I know that bashing Christianity is his only motivation.

I'm so sure of it, I don't even need to watch the show!

that's the perfect synopsis, thank you.

I wish I believed in Jesus so I could feel like I'm right all of the time.
 
2 - God didn't fax the bible from the heavens. It was written - and rewritten, and rewritten, and rewritten again and again - by man. I just don't understand the mentality that discounts this fact to say that the whole document is "divine". How could anyone really believe that any group of men could write something of that nature without building in their own personal prejudices, agendas, and preconceptions? The constitution of this country is considerably shorter than the bible, and was written by men with the best of intentions...and yet it still contains open bigotry and self-serving language. Yet, people think that the bible doesn't suffer from the same flaws?

If you believe God created the universe, it's not difficult to believe He could manuver the pen of man to write EXACTLY what He wanted & for the Bible to contain EXACTLY the words He wants us to have.
 
I don't understand people being so upset about this. If you're a Christian, then you most likely believe in the resurrection, so who cares what anything else thinks? If you're not a Christian, you most likely don't believe in the resurrection, so again, who cares what anyone else thinks?
 
Oh. Then you better contact the Dean that handed me that Bachelor of Science degree a few years back and tell him he made a mistake - that I really didn't comprehend what I was learning. :rotfl:

what curriculum and variant?
 
If you believe God created the universe, it's not difficult to believe He could manuver the pen of man to write EXACTLY what He wanted & for the Bible to contain EXACTLY the words He wants us to have.

explain to me in no biblical terms or verses where God came from.
 
Why not DNA? If man was created in God's image, and Jesus was human, then surely he had DNA.

However, DNA tests would only say if the remains in the ossuaries were related to each other. So a woman named Miriam and a guy named Jusef had a son named Jesua, who married a woman named Miriam. Wow. Ground-breaking news in ancient Israel ;)

Bingo!!!

And why does this "press conference" remind me so much of Geraldo Rivera's infamous April 1986 telecast of the opening of Al Capone's "vault?":lmao:
 
And why does this "press conference" remind me so much of Geraldo Rivera's infamous 1986 telecast of the opening of Al Capone's "vault?"

I thought of that too when I saw the piece on the today show this morning with the boxes sitting there! :lmao:
 


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