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Monday, April 04, 2011

Christian manuscripts smuggled to Israel?

The Jordanian authorities are convinced that some 2,000-year old Christian manuscripts that are currently in Israel belong to them. The manuscripts are in the possession of a Bedouin tribesman.
Director General of Department of Antiquities (DoA) Ziad Saad announced yesterday efforts to reclaim the so-called Jordan codices, 70 metal books bound by lead which Jordanian authorities believe date back to the first century AD and may be the earliest Christian texts ever discovered.

The books billed by Jordanian experts as “more historic than the Dead Sea scrolls” are in the possession of Hassan Saeed, an Israeli bedouin who claims that the texts were passed down from his grandfather.

“We have every indication that these texts were excavated from Jordan illegally in recent years and smuggled across the border,” Saad said at a press conference yesterday.

With scientific evidence in hand, Saad said authorities are working at every diplomatic and legal level in order to return the books from across the river and into Jordan.

According to Saad, the texts and their Jordanian origin were brought to light by David Elkington, a British religious author who was approached by Saeed in 2009 to examine the books’ authenticity.

Saeed travelled to London with two sample books for the scribe’s viewing. When he first laid eyes on the lead codices, Elkington said he knew the texts were no ordinary find.

“When I saw it, I knew immediately I knew it in my heart that these were real and it was the perfect discovery,” Elkington told The Jordan Times over the phone from London.

Most striking were a series of symbols and codes etched across the cover of the texts indicating that the books’ authors were most likely some of the earliest Christians.

A seven-branch menorah, which Jews were forbidden to depict at the time due to its location near the holiest of holies, and the imprint of a star hovering above a palm tree are among several markers which Elkington claims signifies that the texts may refer to Jesus Christ.

“These rarely seen forms of the eight-pointed star tells you this is the star of the Messiah.”

Elkington then sent samples to laboratories from England to Geneva in order to date the texts. Analyses of crystallised Roman lead and leather material found embedded in the lead leaves pinpointed the books’ origin in the early first century AD, Saad said.

Despite the wealth of information revealed by linguistic and metallurgical analyses, Elkington said his team had no indication of the texts origin - let alone that the books may be smuggled goods.

It was only after analysts requested the name of the location of the discovery in order to contrast the Roman lead with naturally found impurities did Saeed reveal codices’ origin: a cave in northern Jordan.

“All this time we thought they were discovered in Israel.”

...

Jordanian authorities voiced hope that no matter how the saga ends, the books will find a final home in a museum on the eastern bank of the River Jordan, near the very site where its authors sought refuge some two millennia ago.

“These manuscripts are a part of Jordan’s heritage and global heritage, and we hope to share it soon with the rest of the world,” Saad said.
Jordan has a Christian heritage. Who'd a thunk it?

Heh.

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3 Comments:

At 7:18 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

The Elder Of Zion reports they're fake and the Jordanians have been hoodwinked into claiming they are authentic Christian antiquities.

Heh

 
At 9:42 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Fake

 
At 3:37 AM, Blogger Lydia McGrew said...

All the Christians I know (including me) believed or strongly suspected they were fake from the first moment they heard about them. Myself, I think someone is trying to hoax Christians into believing them so as to have a laugh at Christians' expense.

 

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