Jesus’
DNA is attracting a lot of attention these days. There’s been specials on TV and all sorts of
suppositions about analyzing God’s DNA.
What
will they find? That depends on their evidence.
Let’s look at the sources.
·
1. The
Shroud of Turin, the famed cloth that Jesus’ body was wrapped in.
·
2. The
Sudarium of Oviedo, a cloth supposedly used to cover and clean the face of
Jesus after the crucifixion.
· 3. The
supposed bones of John the Baptist found off on an island the coast of Bulgaria
in the Black Sea.
Image on the Shroud |
Not
much, but that’s all that’s available.
Let’s
look at each in turn.
Bishop d’Arcis said a predecessor,
Bishop Henri de Poitiers, had “discovered the fraud and how the said cloth had
been cunningly painted, the truth being attested by the artist who had painted
it . . .”
As a result, the Roman Catholic
Church has never accepted the Shroud as genuine.
Nevertheless, Church officials still
held out hope until tests were conducted on fibers drawn from the Shroud
Tests done on the Shroud in the 1980s then were completed extraordinarily
carefully. Three different laboratories in Arizona, Oxford, England and
Zurich, Switzerland tested swathes taken “away from areas that were either
charred or patched” under direct observation of representatives of the
Church. In this controlled test, samples not from the Shroud were also
used. The labs didn’t know which ones they were given.
The published results of this
rigorous study showed that: within “at least 95 percent confidence for the
linen of the Shroud of Turin of AD 1260-1390 (rounded down / up to the nearest
10 yr.). These results therefore provide conclusive evidence that the linen of
the Shroud of Turin is medieval.”
Sudarium |
As a final note, the stains on the
shroud have been tested as well. To
believers, they are blood. Unfortunately, they aren’t. They could be a lot of things – no one is
sure – but they are definitely not blood.
How about the Sudarium of
Oviedo? It’s not as well known. It also has no image on it. However, there are blood stains. Tests show that the stains came at different
intervals. Dead men don’t bleed.
The Sudarium has also been dated via
Carbon 14
by Beta Analytic Inc. from Miami, and the result was 660-890 CE. That’s about 100 years after the cloth was
first mentioned. Researchers suspect
contamination could have interfered with the reading. Regardless, that’s still 500 or so years too
late.
Believers
like to link the Shroud and the Sudarium together. They have nothing in common. The Shroud image is bearded. In the Sudarium, there’s also
no evidence of facial hair, which would have resulted in smears.
Blood
on the Sudarium came from the nose area.
A shroud placed over the area would have smeared. No such smear appears on the Shroud of
Turin.
The
Shroud image has wounds from thorns. The
Sudarium shows no such wounds.
Those
are just some of the differences.
Box supposedly containing John's bones |
How
about the third source: the bones of John the Baptist, supposedly Jesus’ cousin? In the first place, the two men were not
related. John certainly didn’t think so. Early Christians had to contend with a sect
of people who believed in John the Baptist as the messiah. So, in the religious texts, authors had John
deny his own status and point to Jesus. For
the same reason, the two men suddenly became cousins.
Such
a relationship makes no sense if Jesus is really God. God has cousins?
Nevertheless,
six bone fragments have been found. They
have been dated to a male who lived in the first century CE. So far, so good. Also, John appears in historical records, so
he existed. Of course, he’s been pretty
spread out in the intervening years: four
places claim to have his head, including a German museum and a mosque in
Damascus; a place in Turkey claims to have his right arm. However, his right hand is supposedly in a monastery
in Montenegro. Egypt claims a crypt with
relics from the famed preacher.
More
significantly, John was beheaded by the king.
His body probably wasn’t turned over to his followers for reverential
worship. Having angered a monarch, he wouldn’t
get special treatment after death.
Besides,
there’s no way to tell whose body scattered bones around the Middle East. There’s nothing to compare to. No one has the correct DNA of John the Baptist. Millions died in the 1st century
CE. All that can be said is that the
bones in Bulgaria came from one of them. The other bones haven’t been tested.
The
sum of evidence for Jesus’ DNA: zero.
Ancient Nazarenes |
As
a final note, Jesus was not revered as a god or a savior until long after his
death, and after a civil war that destroyed much of the country. The likelihood that anything related to Jesus
was preserved is extremely low. The
early Nazarenes died out during the war.
The only survivors were colonies set up by Paul, all located far from
the battlefield and none interested in relics associated with the dead messiah.
Regardless
of the facts, the stories will continue to bedevil the faithful. Ironically, believers are praying for
scientific evidence, which they commonly reject if the topic was Noah’s Ark or any
other biblical story.
Long-time
religious historian Bill Lazarus regularly writes about religion and religious
history with an occasional foray into American culture. He holds an ABD in American Studies from Case
Western Reserve University. He also
speaks at various religious organizations throughout Florida. You can reach him at wplazarus@aol.com. He is the author of the famed The
Great Seer Nostradamus Tells All; The Gospel Truth: Where Did the Gospel
Writers Get Their Information; Noel:
The Lore and Tradition of Christmas Carols; and Comparative Religion for
Dummies. His books are available on Amazon.com,
Kindle, bookstores and via various publishers.
He can also be followed on Twitter.
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