Apologies if this has come up somewhere else, but I thought I’d mention some very interesting stuff which has come up in the press recently. The Time article linked on the News section here refers to the fact that a tablet has been discovered, dated with some confidence in the 1st century BC, where there seems to be a passage suggesting that a “messiah-like” figure would die and rise after three days.
I was listening to BBC World news item about this and the BBC interviewer was trying to suggest this should disturb Christians, and the Jewish (I think) archaeologist said: “Of course not- it shows that some Jews in the 1st century expected a dying and rising Messiah, which is just what the NT says Jesus fulfilled!”
There’s another interesting article about this in the International Herald Tribune here.
Good quote from the end of this article:
Knohl said that it was less important whether Simon was the messiah of the stone than the fact that it strongly suggested that a savior who died and rose after three days was an established concept at the time of Jesus. He notes that in the Gospels, Jesus makes numerous predictions of his suffering and New Testament scholars say such predictions must have been written in by later followers because there was no such idea present in his day.
But there was, he said, and “Gabriel’s Revelation” shows it.
Sounds right to me! There is also some comment on this by Ben Witherington, here.




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