Could This Be the Biggest Find Since the Dead Sea Scrolls? Seventy
Metal Books Found in Cave in Jordan Could Change Our View of Biblical History
by
Fiona Macrae
Daily Mail
For scholars
of faith and history, it is a treasure trove too precious for price.
This ancient
collection of 70 tiny books, their lead pages bound with wire, could
unlock some of the secrets of the earliest days of Christianity.
Academics are
divided as to their authenticity but say that if verified, they
could prove as pivotal as the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls
in 1947.
On pages not
much bigger than a credit card, are images, symbols and words that
appear to refer to the Messiah and, possibly even, to the Crucifixion
and Resurrection.
Adding to the
intrigue, many of the books are sealed, prompting academics to speculate
they are actually the lost collection of codices mentioned in the
Bibles Book Of Revelation.
The books were
discovered five years ago in a cave in a remote part of Jordan to
which Christian refugees are known to have fled after the fall of
Jerusalem in 70AD. Important documents from the same period have
previously been found there.
Initial metallurgical
tests indicate that some of the books could date from the first
century AD.
This estimate
is based on the form of corrosion which has taken place, which experts
believe would be impossible to achieve artificially.
If the dating
is verified, the books would be among the earliest Christian documents,
predating the writings of St Paul.
The prospect
that they could contain contemporary accounts of the final years
of Jesuss life has excited scholars although their
enthusiasm is tempered by the fact that experts have previously
been fooled by sophisticated fakes.
David Elkington,
a British scholar of ancient religious history and archeology, and
one of the few to have examined the books, says they could be the
major discovery of Christian history.
It is
a breathtaking thought that we have held these objects that might
have been held by the early saints of the Church, he said.
But the mysteries
between their ancient pages are not the books only riddle.
Today, their whereabouts are also something of a mystery. After
their discovery by a Jordanian Bedouin, the hoard was subsequently
acquired by an Israeli Bedouin, who is said to have illegally smuggled
them across the border into Israel, where they remain.
However, the
Jordanian Government is now working at the highest levels to repatriate
and safeguard the collection. Philip Davies, emeritus professor
of biblical studies at Sheffield University, said there was powerful
evidence that the books have a Christian origin in plates cast into
a picture map of the holy city of Jerusalem.
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the rest of the article
March
31, 2011
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